Thursday, December 23, 2010

Best(ish) Albums of 2010

So, another year has passed, and it's been a great one for music in general. Many new discoveries were made, old favorites were renewed, and many of my favorite artists came out with long-anticipated new releases. Singles are nice, but the true measure of a great band is whether or not they can bring it all together for an entire album, and these albums did a pretty good job of that. I'll preface this with two things; first, these are not the 'best' albums released this year by any artistic standard, they are just what I enjoyed the most. Second, I did not include any EPs on this list, so although you may have seen Geographer take two of the top three songs on my 'best songs' list, you won't find that record here (I still recommend it highly!).


Honorable Mentions:


20. Hot Chip - One Life Stand
Britain's dance-rock supergroup of sorts has been one of a few bands in the genre to enjoy crossover success of some kind, and their mainstream appeal became full-fledged this year with One Life Stand. Catchy dance tunes are still the norm for Alexis Taylor and Co., but this record is permeated by great somber tunes such as 'Alley Cats' too. This record really focuses on love of all shapes and sizes, and it's tough not to give a little love to Hot Chip in return.








19. Best Coast - Crazy For You
This was the debut record for California stoner queen Bethany Cosentino, and the title of the album pretty much says it all. Cosentino really wants to be with this dude. Pretty much every song features her pining after presumably the same guy, and it's safe to bet that much of her longing is brought on by the ganja. Thing is, it works. The lyrics are very relateable, and the fuzzy surf-rock hooks make this the perfect album for chillin' on the beach.









18. Ratatat - LP4
This NYC indie-electronic duo's fourth studio album has been widely criticized for being a collection of B-sides just lazily thrown together, indicating a lack of drive to try new things. I beg to differ, because if every band's B-sides were this good it would be impossible to put a list like this together. This record features just as many danceable, catchy hooks as their previous work, and as the old saying goes, 'If it ain't broke, don't fix it.'









17. 65daysofstatic - We Were Exploding Anyway
This criminally underrated post-rock group from England also released their fourth studio album this year to almost zero fanfare. 2010 was a major changing period for 65dos, as they fully abandoned their old all-out guitar assault sound in favor of a predominantly electronic sound. The band didn't lose their edge though, as the riffs on this record still hit just as hard, albeit with a different bite. Listen to the opening beat of 'Mountainhead' for an idea of what I'm getting at.









16. Arcade Fire - The Suburbs
At this point we've all come to expect a lot from Win Butler and friends, perhaps unfairly, but their majestic anthems about loss have caused much of the independent music world (and maybe the mainstream world too, considering this record debuted at #1 on the Billboard charts) to place them on a pedestal. Perhaps it is unfair to judge this band based on their past work, but it's really hard to compare them to anything else. As such, this record was a minor disappointment for me (not that I blame them, they'll probably never top Funeral). However, even a slightly disappointing Arcade Fire record is good for one of the best of the year. The band takes the listener on a stellar journey full of depressing lows and cathartic highs.



15. Laura Marling - I Speak Because I Can
This 20-year old British folk singer came out with her second album this year, a sweep-you-off-your-feet collection of gorgeous acoustic folk tunes. Marling sounds wise beyond her few years, both in the quality of her voice and her mature lyrical themes, making this collection of songs all the more impressive. Let's hope this is the beginning of a long, prolific career.










14. Michael Cassette - Temporarity
Boy, was this record a blast from the past. This well-respected underground producer's first solo album features heavy use of 80s-style electronics, drowning the listener in a deluge of ridiculously catchy synth hooks. You can bet that this some of this stuff will be on the playlist at any dance party I throw.











13. LCD Soundsystem - This Is Happening
James Murphy hit the big 4-0 early this year, and on this LCD record (possibly their last) you can definitely tell it's something he thinks about. A lot. Despite the final two songs being a bit boring, there is enough good stuff in the first seven to make this a really great record. From the joyous celebration of partying in 'Drunk Girls' to the desperation of clinging to love in 'I Can Change,' Murphy just gets better and better with age.









12. Beach House - Teen Dream
Honestly, a week ago this wasn't on my list because I hadn't listened to it yet. If I made this list again in another week it might be even higher up. The Baltimore dream-pop duo makes exquisitely refined songs with aching melodies and beautiful reverb. It's like My Bloody Valentine and Enya had a baby, and it is glorious.










11. Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz
With his first proper album is four years, Sufjan Stevens underwent some drastic changes. Gone are the banjos and crooning passages about the unique locales of midwestern America. They were replaced by spare electronics and lots of introspection and demon-facing. The end result is a beautiful journey through the darkest places of Stevens' mind, and strangely enough, in the end it ends up being more uplifting than any record he're written before.









10. Emeralds - Does It Look Like I'm Here?
One of the few good things still happening in Cleveland, Ohio (hurr hurr), drone outfit Emeralds have been nothing if not prolific, releasing cassette after cassette of material for the past five years. This year's full-length release Does It Look Like I'm Here is the most polished of the bunch, a sprawling mixture of ambient textures and schizoid synth melodies. The music swells and recedes beautifully, making this the perfect 'lie on your bed and think' album.







9. Belle and Sebastian - Write About Love
The legendary Scottish twee act returned with their 8th studio album this year, bringing to rest the genre-confusion of their past couple records and settling somewhere in the middle. Write About Love brilliantly combines the upbeat jazziness of The Life Pursuit with some of the quieter, more reserved tunes from their early releases. Sarah Martin steals some of the spotlight with more vocal work than we usually see, which is definitely a plus. All in all, this is just another great record from an excellent group of musicians.






8. Two Door Cinema Club - Tourist History
These Irish youngsters debuted with quite possibly the most fun album of the year. The three-piece band features post-punk song structures that somehow dissolve into some of the bounciest dance music of the year, not to mention more catchy hooks than you can shake a stick at. Somewhat overlooked this year by many major publications, I think they'll hit the big time very very soon.









7. Matthew Dear - Black City
Longtime electrohouse producer Matthew Dear has long been behind some of the world's biggest dance hits, but it wasn't until recently he stepped to the forefront of his music and grabbed the mic. Black City is a dark affair; a collection of songs featuring Dear's deep baritone over squelchy beats and riffs that practically ooze. Dear uses his imperfect voice creatively, using it intricately to add a sense of foreboding to the beats. In the end, the mix is hauntingly beautiful, though it takes a few listens to really understand.






6. Fang Island - Fang Island
When I first heard Fang Island coming through my headphones on my way to campus, I kind of had to fight the urge to start skipping down the street. Fang Island describes their music as 'everyone high-fiving everyone,' and honestly, there really isn't a better way to describe it. Soaring triple-guitar melodies make statement after statement, and the few sung portions are joys to behold.









5. Deerhunter - Halcyon Digest
All it takes is the first few bars of 'Earthquake' to let you know you're in for something truly different with Deerhunter's latest record. The psych-rock group's latest effort is a spectacle, with its somber guitar lines accentuated by haunting ambient noise. Frontman Bradford Cox tackles aging and death in his lyrics, as is most apparent in the last song, 'He Would Have Laughed,' a tribute to recently deceased garage-punk icon Jay Reatard. The last few bars of that song might be the musical moment of the year, as the song twinkles out of existence abruptly mid-bar, mirroring the unexpected death of Reatard. Sadness has never sounded so pretty.




4. Gorillaz - Plastic Beach
Gorillaz, being a one-man show run by former Blur frontman Damon Albarn, have always relied on guest appearances to take the stellar music to the next level. Albarn really hit the jackpot in that respect on Plastic Beach, landing awesome guest spots from Bobby Womack, Little Dragon, Mos Def, and Snoop Dogg. Albarn calls it "the most pop album I've ever made in many ways," but the truth is it may be the best album in the Gorillaz trilogy.








3. Sleigh Bells - Treats
I'm not sure the world was ready for Derek Miller to wait on Alexis Krauss' table at a Brooklyn cafe. The two began to talk about music and the rest is history. Sleigh Bells strange combination of loud-beyond-belief guitars, drum machine rumbles, and Krauss' relatively soft voice singing though the chaos, is a new phenomenon in the music world. The energy of Sleigh Bells is unparalleled by any group today, and with their music now being used in major advertisements, Sleigh Bells are on their way to being more than just an indie phenomenon.






2. The National - High Violet
Matt Berninger just has a way with words. The Brooklyn-via-Cincinnati group just keeps putting out solid records about ordinary American adult life, and this is probably the best of the bunch. What makes the National so great is the fact that the lyrics are so relateable; Berninger is a normal, troubled guy just like most of the rest of us, and he does a brilliant job of turning his feelings into beautiful poetry. Combine that with masterful songwriting and you've got one of the best bands making music out there today.






1. Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy
Wow. For the majority of the year I didn't think any record would top High Violet in my mind. Then some guy named Kanye released a record and I played songs off that record 244 times in the ensuing week. That made me take notice. Kanye West's magnum opus is a masterpiece in American hip-hop and the best album released this year. The tight production, the funny rhymes, the move from epic egotism at the beginning to bleak self-hatred at the end. Kanye may not be the best rapper out there, but he sure as hell is the best hip-hop producer, and has a bevy of high-profile friends to make up for whatever skills he lacks (not many). Competitors will be hard-pressed to make sure this isn't the best hip-hop record of the decade to come.

That's it for 2010, see you in 2011!

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Top 50 Songs of 2010

So, the end of the year is nigh, and thus time for end-of-the-year best-of lists! 2010 was a wonderful year for music, with the potential to get even wonderfuller (*cough*Radiohead*cough*). This week I'll present my 50 favorite songs of 2010 (in some semblance of order). Next week you'll get my 20 favorite albums. So, without further ado, here's the list!

50. Slowdance - Matthew Dear
49. Indestructible - Robyn
48. Lucidity - Tame Impala
47. Celestica - Crystal Castles
46. Ready to Start - Arcade Fire
45. Shutterbugg - Big Boi
44. Latin America - Holy Fuck
43. Too Much - Sufjan Stevens
42. Bloodbuzz Ohio - The National
41. Drugs - Ratatat
40. Wut - Girl Unit
39. Runaway - Kanye West
38. Empty Room - Arcade Fire
37. He Would Have Laughed - Deerhunter
36. Careful Crossers - Fang Island
35. Sorrow - The National
34. I Feel Better - Hot Chip
33. Drunk Girls - LCD Soundsystem
32. Rill Rill - Sleigh Bells
31. Little People (Black City) - Matthew Dear
30. I Didn't See It Coming - Belle and Sebastian
29. Rambling Man - Laura Marling
28. On Melancholy Hill - Gorillaz
27. Power - Kanye West
26. Crockett's Theme - Michael Cassette
25. Pow Pow - LCD Soundsystem
24. Does It Look Like I'm Here? - Emeralds
23. Kids - Sleigh Bells
22. Something Good Can Work - Two Door Cinema Club
21. Take It In - Hot Chip

20. Boyfriend - Best Coast
Singer/guitarist Bethany Cosentino's debut was a wistful, funny group of catchy songs about love and weed, and her first single was the best of the bunch. "Boyfriend" is a firsthand account of longing after a boy, but realizing that his current girlfriend is way more qualified than you are.

19. Only Girl (In The World) - Rihanna
After Rihanna's much-publicized run-in with Chris Brown and the introspective outpouring of emotion that manifested itself in Rated R, Rihanna returned this year doing what she does best; making catchy as hell pop singles. Only Girl (In The World) is a raucous return to form for the pop star, with a hook that is as irresistible as any out there.

18. I Want The World To Stop - Belle and Sebastian
The Scottish twee icons released one of their best albums to date this year in Write About Love, and this is sure to become one of their most recognizable songs. "I Want The World To Stop" features a fun guitar hook and the same pleasant wistfulness we've all come to expect from B&S.

17. Viktorious - Big K.R.I.T.
Definitely the shortest entry on this list, the Mississippi rapper's track about his climb to fame and representing his home state is a masterpiece of flow and lyrical brilliance.

16. Schizophrenia - Jukebox The Ghost
This piano-pop group began their rise to fame this year after they appeared on Letterman to perform this insanely infectious single. (Watch the Letterman performance to see lead singer Ben Thornewill do hilarious things with his eyes!)

15. Conversation 16 - The National
Brooklyn-via-Cincinnati group The National put out perhaps their best album this year, and "Conversation 16" is one of the standout tracks. Singer Matt Berninger uses his addictive deep baritone voice to lament 'I was afraid/I'd eat your brain,' to show he's scared of turning his lover into someone as depressed as he is.

After releasing his critically acclaimed album Plastic Beach earlier in the year, Gorillaz frontman Damon Albarn began recording more music while on tour for a promised second Gorillaz release on Christmas Day. This is presumably one of the tracks from that forthcoming album, a hopping vocal-intensive song featuring British soul singer Daley.

13. Daisy - Fang Island
Brooklyn outfit Fang Island released an album of the year contender with their self-titled debut, and 'Daisy,' a raucous romp of dueling guitars and catchy hooks, sets the tone for the rest of the record.

12. Empire Ants - Gorillaz
Gorillaz' third album Plastic Beach is a sprawling genre-defying journey to a new world, and it couldn't be as good as it is without some excellent guest appearances. This is one of the best, as Little Dragon contributes vocals to this standout.

11. Desire Lines - Deerhunter
This standout track from Deerhunter's 2010 record Halcyon Digest seems to be moving quickly and slowly simultaneously. Singer Bradford Cox croons 'Walking free (whoa-oh)/Come with me (whoa-oh)/Far away (whoa-oh)/Everyday (whoa-oh) before the song twirls into a trippy guitar breakdown.

10. Fuck You - Cee-Lo Green
By now you've all heard this insanely catchy soul single from newcomer Cee-Lo Green. His tale of pursuit of the girl of his dreams is one of the anthems of 2010.

9. Hell Of A Life - Kanye West
Kanye hit the mic again this year in a big way; his record My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy has received spectacular reviews from critics and fans alike. 'Hell Of A Life' contains the central theme of that record...'No more drugs for me/pussy and religion is all I need.' We hear you Yeezy, we hear you.

8. I Walked - Sufjan Stevens
This gorgeous piece of minimalistic pop really brought the new Sufjan to light. Stevens pleads his case to a lost love, explaining what went wrong and hoping things can be made better again.

7. Eat That Up, It's Good For You - Two Door Cinema Club
Two Door Cinema Club's debut album passed relatively unknown in the States, which is a shame. Their new brand of catchy, danceable pop-rock songs is irresistible, as showcased on this track.

6. Tell 'Em - Sleigh Bells
Once the rapid-fire drum machine of 'Tell 'Em' first reaches your ears, you know you're in for something special. This song is just that, with Alexis Krauss' vocals bursting through the chaos that swirls around them.

5. England - The National
High Violet really is an incredible album, and this is the best song off it. Matt Berninger sings of cathedrals and the pain of separation over a majestic piano melody.

4. Tenderoni - Kele
Bloc Party frontman Kele Okereke took a break from his main band to go solo this year, and an intriguing collection of moody electronic songs was the result. This is the best of them though; 'Tenderoni' is a different breed of dance track, with a catchy falsetto chorus at its forefront.

3. Kites - Geographer
Another one of the criminally under-noticed bands of 2010, San Fransisco indie group Geographer crafted its own brand of electro-pop, with beautiful vocal melodies and soothing cello backing each of the songs on 2010's Animal Shapes EP. This is an excellent track from that EP, with the most enthralling intro of the year.

2. All Of The Lights - Kanye West
Majestic. Epic. Bombastic. All are words that can describe the best track on Kanye West's acclaimed 2010 masterpiece My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy. 'All Of The Lights' a story of redemption, a fitting soundtrack to Kanye's recent life struggles.

1. Verona - Geographer
I really didn't want to put two Geographer songs in the top 3, but I really had no choice. This song's perfect blend of melodies and gorgeous vocals made it the perfect choice for my favorite song of 2010.


So there you have it! Tune in next week sometime for my 20 best albums of 2010!


Monday, November 22, 2010

Kanye West - My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy

Anyone who knows me knows I'm not the biggest fan of hip-hop. I dabble in it sometimes, but my relationship with rap music has always been rocky. It just takes something incredible, whether it be amazing flow, airtight production, or lush instrumentation, for me to honor a rap tune with repeated listens. Most rappers don't have the creativity (or the right friends) to make their music sound anything but ordinary to me. Of course, most rappers aren't Kanye West.

Kanye's fifth studio album, My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy, doesn't just have a few songs worthy of repeated listens, the entire album is worth repeated listens. Over and over and over again. Kanye is one of a kind; the perfect storm of creativity, aptitude for the right guest appearances, and pure, unadulterated insanity. Fantasy is an exploration of the complications that being the most talked about pop artist of the last ten years brings. West has always had a penchant for letting the world in on his deepest personal struggles, and that is only exemplified here. He raps about falling in love with a porn star on 'Hell of a Life,' letting the world know "No more drugs for me/pussy and religion is all I need." On 'Blame Game,' the album's most deeply cutting song, he sounds contrite and angry at the same time, as he simultaneously tells his girlfriend he cheated on her and discovers she was doing the same to him. He even addresses the infamous South Park episode on 'Gorgeous,' rapping "...choke a South Park writer with a fish stick." Emotionally, West is all over the place, slipping from manic egotism into soul-cutting depression at the drop of a hat, making this album an incredible look into the deepest recesses of West's convoluted mind.

Much of Kanye's success has always leaned on the guests he features, and the story is no different here. All manner of stars, old and new, make appearances on this record. West's old standby and mentor Jay-Z's two verses are stellar as usual, as are the appearances from old dogs Raekwon and Rick Ross. The standout guest verse to me, however, is newcomer Nicki Minaj's schizophrenic verse on 'Monster.' Minaj switches from sounding cutesy to appropriately monstrous multiple times, and her delivery (Kanye wrote the majority of the verse) makes the verse really memorable. In terms of actual singing, Kanye employs a who's who of today's best, including Rihanna and John Legend.

The production and instrumentation are vintage Kanye West as well. Standout track 'All of the Lights' features grandiose horns and a tight, sick drum line, more than making up for what it lacks in lyrical quality (Fergie's little bit is one of the couple bad guest spots on the record). Overall, the entire album is tightly produced and flows brilliantly. West has really outdone himself this time, delivering a deeply emotional, schizoid album that no one else could have made. 4.7/5.

Standout tracks:

Songs of the Week (some stuff I've been listening to a little more than is healthy this past week.)
The National - Green Gloves - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OBhGFu84u90

Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Kings of Leon - Come Around Sundown

Sup friends, sorry about the long break between posts, school destroyed me this past week. But I'm past all that (for now!) so here's a review! First of all though, I saw a ballin' show this past Halloween weekend, as noise-pop titans Sleigh Bells came to BoMA to celebrate Halloween with Columbus, of all the places in the world. It was a super-energetic performance as they performed basically the entirety of their debut album and Album of the Year candidate Treats. Definitely worth the $10 ticket and mega-overpriced drinks to see, but besides the aforementioned drinks BoMA is a great place to see a show and I would definitely recommend checking one out there sometime.

Anyway, here's this week's review, of Come Around Sundown, Kings of Leon's highly anticipated follow-up to their 2008 hit record Only by the Night. KoL have been mainstays on the UK charts since 2002, but it took a wave of smash singles from Only by the Night to garner support for the familial quartet from Tennessee (three brothers and a cousin). That record netted them two Grammy awards, and after a slew of major festival appearances they were back in the studio to record their 5th proper album.

Unfortunately, it appears the hype and increased expectations have taken their toll on the band. Come Around Sundown feels like a re-hashing of what made Only by the Night so popular, but with even less creativity. I wasn't a big fan of Only by the Night, but I still listen to the first two songs from that record, and I feel like those two tracks showcase the band at their creative peak. Sundown also starts off with a flourish, with the energetic foot-tapper "The End" and the new single "Radioactive," but even those songs feel stale. This album has no flow and very little change of pace, it's just the same songs over and over again. The vocals are, as usual, an issue as well. Anyone who has heard Caleb Followill's singing voice knows that it can grate on you after a while, and that is still the case here. I don't hold it against him because it's definitely hard to change the way your voice sounds, but it makes it that much harder to enjoy the music.

And enjoying the music is hard enough as it is. All the songs just blur together, so much so that I have to keep looking at the tracklist to remember what song I'm listening to. By the 5th track I am dozing off, and there really isn't much end in sight for an album that is almost 50 minutes long. Pretty average by typical standards, but far too long for this album. Lyrical themes are pretty standard for KoL; southern life, parties, and failed relationships.

There are a few bright points though. The upbeat 'Beach Side' features a neat little slide guitar lick and is fairly catchy, and 'Pony Up' definitely has some engaging bass/guitar interactions. However, these are just a couple good spots in an album that is bogged down with too much 'been there, done that.' And until the Followills have a few more creative bursts like the one they had when they wrote 'Closer,' I have a feeling the rest of their career will feel like deja vu too. 2.1/5.



Songs of the Week (some stuff I've been listening to more than is healthy this past week):
Local Natives - Who Knows Who Cares (VIDEO NSFW) - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hAHD6WQSBWo
BIG K.R.I.T. - Viktorious - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pnJ3kf8KYaU


Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Sufjan Stevens - The Age of Adz





The Age of Adz
, indie mastermind Sufjan Stevens' fifth proper album, could and probably should be described as an oddity for the multi-instrumentalist. The musical structures and lyrical content are a far cry from the wistful storytelling and soft acoustic overtones of 2005's Illinois. Rather, Stevens goes back to his early electronic works and unveils some deeply personal lyrics to create a chaotic record full of alternating pieces of lush instrumentation and minimalistic beauty.

The album's title (pronounced 'The Age of Odds') and cover art are taken from the works of paranoid schizophrenic sign painter and self-proclaimed prophet Royal Robertson, whose pieces are a smörgåsbord of apocalyptic images and poorly written slogans of misogyny. In an interview with Eyeweekly.com, Stevens describes Robertson's art as "...impulsive free-association, and the lyrics on The Age of Adz also follow that [impulse]." The lyrical content of Adz showcases the typically reserved Stevens at his most uncensored. This is most apparent on the track "I Want To Be Well," on which Sufjan exclaims, 'I'm not fuckin' around!' no less than 16 times. On "Futile Devices," Stevens croons to a lost love he couldn't express his feelings for in words. "Vesuvius" sees Stevens referring to himself directly, comparing some kind of deep sadness in him to being trapped under the famed volcano that destroyed Pompeii. His gift for lyricism really shines here, as he lets us into his deepest thoughts, singing 'Sufjan/the panic inside/the murdering ghost that you cannot ignore.' Don't think that every song on Adz is dark and depressing though. The title track is an optimistic piece on Stevens' belief in eternal life, albeit not in the traditional sense, and the closer "Impossible Soul" is a massive opus about moving on after a tragic event (and Sufjan uses Auto-Tune for a spell, so it's gotta be good).

Musically, this is some of Sufjan's best work to date. His talent as a composer is obviously apparent as you hear everything from chaotic orchestral fracases ("The Age of Adz") to soft electro-pop ("I Walked"). The harmonics are absolutely gorgeous, and Sufjan's voice towers above it all, conveying his deepest thoughts to you over majestic instrumentation and choral background singing. Sometimes it toes the line between majestic and overly bombastic, but usually stays on the correct side. Besides the first track, you won't hear much of the soft balladry that made him an indie darling in the mid-2000s, but his gift for incredible compositional songwriting is almost enough to make you forget Michigan and Illinois even existed.

The flaws here mostly lie in the middle track, the grossly over-composed "Now That I'm Older." This track just tries a bit too hard, with a few too many angelic choruses and harps, it just sounds muddy and frankly boring. This is the only blip in an otherwise exceptional album, but what else do you expect from Sufjan Stevens? Here's hoping his next work can be as incredibly creative as this one. 4.5/5.

Friday, October 15, 2010

Hello there

If you're reading this, chances are you're a friend of mine, and you may have read my inspired albeit short-lived blog from 2008, which was discontinued mostly because of unfortunate timing; school got real fuckin' hard as I was hitting my stride. Not to say things haven't changed, but I feel more equipped to handle both workloads now so I'm starting with a literal blank slate. In this blog I will review new (and perhaps as yet unreleased?) albums that I have been waiting eagerly to hear. Thus my reviews might be biased towards my expectations, so if that happens sorry. I will also post concert reviews and random musings that I feel are interesting enough to write about. I hope you all enjoy, and if you don't, you have my permission to stop reading and/or slap me in the face either verbally or physically (I prefer verbally) and I may or may not take your opinions into consideration.

As luck would have it, I have something to talk about already! I have found that one of the nice things about attending a large (read: HUGE) university is that there's a nice student activity budget that the good people at the activities board use mostly wisely to bring in all sorts of notable performance artists, including musicians, and sometimes for free! Iron & Wine came to the school last night, and Mr. Beam put on a great show; I've never seen a single performer have so much control over an audience. But his performance is not what I came to write about, it was the performance (or lack thereof) of the audience during the opening act, a soft-spoken man named Daniel Martin Moore who performed some equally soft songs on acoustic guitar.

Now, I understand that people came to see Iron & Wine, and thus they may have gotten a tad impatient during the opening performance, but the level of respect being shown to this poor guy was just dismal. I'm not speaking from experience, but I'd imagine being an opening act is pretty tough as it is, and when nearly the entire crowd is talking over your music, you're making the guy feel completely un-cared about, and is that a good thing to do? Obviously not. If you think your little conversations are more important than giving someone who is trying his best to entertain you half an hour of your time, you should probably just stop coming to concerts and ruining the experience for the people who actually want to listen. They even gave you guys wristbands so you could re-enter the room, if you need to carry on a conversation with your friends that badly, just walk outside and do it, don't fucking ruin it for everyone who wants to listen to the music.

I hope I can give you something interesting to read at least weekly, for now here's a song I've been listening to a lot lately, off the new Deerhunter album Halcyon Digest