The Kills take Marilyn Monroe’s ballad of the old west into a bit more quieter, sparer place. Mosshart or GTFO.
The Kills – One Silver Dollar (Marilyn Monroe)The Kills (Official) (Facebook)
Rating 8.1
The Kills take Marilyn Monroe’s ballad of the old west into a bit more quieter, sparer place. Mosshart or GTFO.
The Kills – One Silver Dollar (Marilyn Monroe)The Kills (Official) (Facebook)
Rating 8.1
Radiohead continue their long march towards shining up that gloomy shitbrick of an LP they dropped earlier this year. This time “Separator” gets the A-List remix treatment via the Four Tet man. The mix is one part spaceballs, one part Massive Attack’s “Teardrop”, and one part “pretty good” remix. See if you can sort all those parts out for yourself below.
Radiohead – Separator (Four Tet Remix)
Rating 8.0
Your fav 90’s revivalists, Grouplove are all set to release their debut album Never Trust a Happy Song on 13 Sep (US) and 5 Sep (UK). The bouncy, catchy “Tongue Tied” is the LP’s lead single. Watch the Grouplove crew wylin out backwards in 3-D (if only more of life could be experienced this way) in the cool clip for the track below.
Grouplove – Tongue TiedOur buddies from Bombay Bicycle Club will be the featured artist on our Virgin Mobile Live radio show today (3 PM Eastern/12 PM Pacific). We’ve got a great interview we did with them at SXSW and we’ll be spinning a few of our favorites from their catalogue include new single “Shuffle”. (Sounds great, right?) But to keep you sated for the next couple hours we’re dropping this cool new remix for “Shuffle” done by a fav of the blog, Bibio (courtesy of PMA). Check that shit below.
Bombay Bicycle Club – Shuffle (Bibio Remix)Rating 8.2
Wanna go to L.A. Rising TOMORROW at the L.A. Coliseum? We’ve got two passes to see Rage Against the Machine, Muse, Lauryn Hill and more. We’ve got to move fast on these tickets. If you want’em email us in the next 90 minutes before 11:30 AM Pacific. We will select a winner shortly there after. Good luck!
WU LYF on Tues, Cults on Wed? The lineup as of late can hardly get better @ the Echo. I’m sure many folks pulled double duty, but after the grandeur of WU LYF I was looking forward to Cults’ laidback / throwback girl-pop.
After an epic jockeying for a prime parking spot, I entered the venue as opener Guards finished up one of the first couple songs of their set. This five-piece from NYC via San Diego (just like Cults) has got some nice ideas behind them. The clear distinction of quality is unmistakable as they fly into their next song. Guards strike a chord both relevant and classic – they wouldn’t sound out of place on the Freaks and Geeks or Adventureland soundtrack (as opposed to Sixteen Candles). The lead singer says “thank you very much” after each song, acknowledging the symbiotic musician-audience relationship.
Guards have two or three pretty good songs and one great song titled “Resolution of One”. “On a better day, I hope to give it all away” is crooned with this rare sense of nostalgia lacking bitterness. The quick introduction into the second verse and chorus is quite memorable and worth the price of admission. A couple of their tunes sounded too schizophrenic, going from ballad to freakout and back to ballad in 2:40, but “Resolution of One” shows that Guards can channel some very powerful energy when they follow a singular idea from start to finish.
Cults took the stage a little after 11pm. Singer Madeline Follin introduces the band with a bubbly, “Hi! We’re Cults!” then commands the stage with effortlessness. She and guitarist Brian Oblivion started the band while students at NYC – amazing that a project supposedly recorded for friends could be so ‘radio’ ready! The sexy duo tours as a full band and sound A LOT harder live. Comparisons to The Ronettes and The Crystals fall in favor of a Let It Be Spector wall-of-sound.
“Abducted” sounded amazing and captured the hardness of the original recording. “You Know What I Mean” retained its early Motown Magic. The crowd was obviously digging the harder sound, but I think some of their saccharine sweetness becomes lost amidst the lush instrumentation. As a Motown / OBG purist, I’m always relieved when I hear the revival of classic pop music in the year 2011, which the slick production values on the self-titled Cults captures so perfectly. I can appreciate any live experimentation with arrangements and sounds, but with Cults there was little tone-for-tone sameness.
The mark of great musicianship is versatility. The best artists are chameleons and blend into the colors of the chosen genre. By the time Cults played the viral “Go Outside” late in the set, it seemed to me that they’ve already evolved beyond their debut sound. I wouldn’t be surprised if they put out a completely different record next year, but I want Cults to maintain their youthful nonchalance forever. – Chris Gedos
Cults – The Curse (Official) (Bandcamp) Guards – Resolution of One (Bandcamp)RATING: 8.35
#alldafteverything
Daft Punk – Aerodynamic (Nicky Romero Bootleg)
Nicky Romero (Soundcloud) (Facebook)
Rating 8.1
Adventure Club (Soundcloud) (Facebook)
Rating 8.5
Lot’s of ace tracks on this TeddyBears album. “Crystal Meth Christian” features The Flaming Lips. You can really feel the Lips’ influence on this track. It feels like something they would have put on an album of their own. Contributed by Bruce Rave
Teddybears – Crystal Meth Christian (Feat. The Flaming Lips)Teddybears (Official) (Facebook)
Catch Bruce on Moheak Radio Fridays 1-3pm PST
“Judy, Judy” by Houttaker, a member of Infinite Best band Distractions, is beautiful. It’s the sort of soulful, reverb-drenched, cascading track that many bands and artists with much higher profiles don’t seem to do nearly as well. A major highlight (and there are many) of the tune comes at about 1:30 when a wall of deep-in-the-p.a. guitar leads come down into the track. That minute or so instrumental is maybe one of our favorite bits of music we’ve heard so far this year. It’s that cool. See what you think below.
Houtakker – Judy, Judy Tip I Guess I’m FloatingRating 8.0
So sometimes when deciding what to feature on b3sci, we ask ourselves a pretty simple question: “Would the legendary James Brown actually be into this? Would he like this record? Would he “feel good” listening to it?” Well, JB would prob be into this track, no doubt, but I think a more appropriate music legend litmus test to use on The Jim Jones Revue’s “High Horse” is “Would Elvis be into this? Would Elvis want to give this tune a second spin, or would he rather go eat a peanut butter and bananers sandwich?” Hmmmm. So would Elvis likely be into “High Horse”? We are thinking….”Uh huh.”
The Jim Jones Revue – High HorseThe Jim Jones Revue (Official) (Facebook)
Rating 8.0
“Billie Jean” is one of MJ’s signature songs. There is no doubting that. But the iconic 1983 track may have found a new guardian on earth now that the King of Pop has passed. Aloe’s cover here of “Billie Jean” with a live string accompaniment is nothing short of stunning. Props to MADE for putting this performance together.
Aloe Blacc – Billie JeanAloe Blacc (Official) (Twitter)
Rating 8.4