2009年3月19日
SONG OF THE WEEK #16 - À L'Oorigine by Benjamin Biolay
Benjamin Biolay
À L'Origine (2005)
2008年12月28日
New York Times' Top 10 Albums of 2008
1. Dear Science
by TV on the Radio
Desperation and anger give way to celebration through sheer force of will on “Dear Science.” For this album TV on the Radio traded its noisiness for clarity, the better to reveal the workings of its ambitious, multilayered songs: programming and hands-on playing, rock and funk, elegies and dance grooves, accusations and embraces. Each song follows its own idiosyncratic path from mourning to affirmation.
2. Third
by Portishead
After an 11-year separation between studio albums, Portishead resumed the desolate mood of its 1990s trip-hop, but with none of the cushioning that made its old albums boutique staples. Its new songs are just sparse beats, isolated hanging keyboard chords, jolts of electronic dissonance and the utterly inconsolable voice of Beth Gibbons, contemplating perpetual loneliness.
3. The Mandé Variations
by Toumani Diabaté
After collaborating with musicians as diverse as Bjork and his fellow Malian Ali Farka Touré, the virtuoso kora (West African harp) player Toumani Diabaté has an unadorned solo instrumental album that brings a world of ideas to his tradition. Playing ancient West African pieces and his own compositions, he plucks complex yet transparent counterpoint, sometimes urgent, sometimes serene, in meditations that never flaunt how cosmopolitan they are.
4. New Amerykah: Part One (4th World War)
by Erykah Badu
Far removed from current R&B, Ms. Badu plunges into deep, strange funk to ponder her own psyche, the desperate state of the ghetto and the state of the nation. The grooves are sparse, jazzy and hollowed out while her multiplied voices drift in with unsparing observations, advice and arguments. It’s a late-breaking successor to Sly and the Family Stone’s “There’s a Riot Goin’ On,” and just as uncompromising; Ms. Badu places the seductive "Honey" at the end of the album as a sweet reward.
5. In Ear Park
by Department of Eagles
Childhood memories and thoughts of mortality ride a carousel of retrofitted California pop, with cascading guitars and vocal harmonies that grow far more pensive than sunny. Department of Eagles is Daniel Rossen of Grizzly Bear resuming his collaboration with his college roommate Fred Nicolaus, backed on the album by Grizzly Bear’s rhythm section. The sound of their introspection often unfurls to cinematic richness while holding on to the intimacy of a shared secret.
6. That Lonesome Song
by Jamey Johnson
All the pain of what sounds like a bitter divorce can’t dislodge the craftsmanship and country classicism of the songwriter Jamey Johnson, and the tension between autobiography and a good couplet gives “That Lonesome Song” an extra poignancy. Mr. Johnson places his low, stoic voice in lean, old-fashioned arrangements with pedal steel guitar floating above, and in confessions of his own excesses, he’s harder on himself than he is on his ex.
7. At Mount Zoomer
by Wolf Parade
Wolf Parade’s two songwriters, Dan Boeckner and Spencer Krug, trade off songs and volley big ideas about cities, wars, memories and human connections. The analog keyboard tones hark back to the 1970s and 1980s, and so does Wolf Parade’s willingness to build toward marches and anthems under their quavery lead vocals. Behind the pomp and ambiguity, though, is a pop sense that fills the songs with foot-stomping hooks.
8. Microcastle
by Deerhunter
With a wistful familiarity that’s spookier than most scare tactics, Bradford Cox sings about “dreams that frighten me awake”: woozy visions of murder, confinement and vampires. They’re placed in echoey, neo-psychedelic jams, circling through a few chords, that mingle disorientation with obsession.
9. Alas, I Cannot Swim
by Laura Marling
Somehow Ms. Marling, now 18, gained a perspective that sees romance as part of larger cycles of life and death in her songs. And somehow she was drawn not to contemporary rock but to a folky, largely acoustic production that modestly updates 1960s folk-rock and links her to a long British ballad tradition. For further mystery there’s her smoky voice, mature without affectation.
10. Santogold
by Santogold
The terse, confident, beat-loving, wiggly-voiced character that Santi White makes of herself as the leader of Santogold obviously follows through on the pugnacity of M.I.A. and of Karen O from Yeah Yeah Yeahs. But Santogold brings her own fixations to the ultralean new wave, reggae and electro tracks: notably the competitive ambitions of an artist who declares herself unstoppable and sets out to prove it.
[via New York Times: A Mix of Vocals, Lyrics and Styles]
2008年12月10日
TIME's Top 10 Albums of 2008
1. Tha Carter III
by Lil Wayne
Tha Carter III is beyond sprawling, but its lack of discipline is also its point. It's a pop showcase for Dwayne Carter, the very peculiar cough syrup-swilling New Orleans rapper who swears he improvises all of his rhymes. Whether he really does is anybody's guess, but amid all the Auto-Tuned vocals and effects — no rapper enjoys hearing his own voice distorted more — are shrewd commercial choices (the No. 1 hit "Lollipop," the Jay-Z duet "Mr. Carter") and extended periods of verse that take rap back to its essence: talking. On "DontGetIt," over a sample of Nina Simone's "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," Wayne tells a 10-minute life story that meanders into an indictment of drug laws and an out-of-nowhere slam of Al Sharpton. The words are smart, but the delivery — just behind the beat, in a voice that sounds like Miles Davis lecturing on Robitussin — is hypnotic.
2. Dear Science
by TV on the Radio
This Brooklyn band spent most of its first three albums emptying out the tool shed in pursuit of weird things to make noise with. This time they haul out all their usual unusual props — out-of-time drums, jazz horn squawks, power tools — but in the service of great tunes. With its Beach Boys '"ba-ba-bas" and killer lo-fi guitar, "Halfway Home" is all propulsion and energy, the best album opener of the year. "Family Tree" is a rock ballad sung with great tenderness by Tunde Adebimpe while "Red Dress" is the smartest thing about race this year not written by Barack Obama. Hopefully the merging of their cerebral side with melodies you can actually hum will finally get TVotR an audience outside their borough.
3. Death Magnetic
by Metallica
You can be forgiven for thinking they were washed up after three mediocre albums — they thought as much themselves. But a few months with Rick Rubin and a return to their thrash roots produced the best album in Metallica's catalog. What brought them back is simple: speed and length. Metallica has never played as fast or made songs that last as long. Case in point: Death Magnetic's best track, "Broken, Beat & Scarred," which has a chaotic, minute-long intro and a melody-line that bobs and weaves until the 3:30 mark, when, just after James Hetfield barks the career-defining Metallica lyric, "What don't kill ya make ya more strong," all four band members start playing as hard and as fast as they can — without sacrificing a single note — for another two minutes. After all these years, Metallica still has the capacity to make you bang your head. Now they just make you do it faster and longer.
4. Feed the Animals
by Girl Talk
Sure, Girl Talk (ex-engineering student Greg Gillis) uses shards of hundreds of already well-known songs to make his secondhand hits. But bolstered by the most liberal interpretation of the fair use statute known to man, he's made the rare album on which every track is a party-starter. Like all DJs, Gillis has a great set of ears and a hell of a laptop, and it's a must to listen with his Wikipedia page open just to keep track of all the wild collisions, like K7 into The Carpenters into Metallica on "Like This," or Ice Cube's "AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted" into Hot Chocolate's "Every 1's a Winner" on "Give Me a Beat." Gillis slips in the odd social message — pairing Temple of the Dog's "Hunger Strike" with Ludacris' money loving "What's Your Fantasy," for instance — but his most powerful statement is cribbed from David Bowie: let's dance!
5. Vampire Weekend
by Vampire Weekend
Dubbed the "whitest band" by the experts over at Stuff White People Like, these recent Columbia University alums do indeed sing about such pressing subjects as Oxford commas, albeit with the proper disdain ("Who gives a fuck about an Oxford comma?") But their whiteness has less to do with their familiarity with the MLA Handbook than an unrestrained admiration for blackness. From the Afro-pop guitars and soukous rhythms to name-checking Lil Jon ("First the window, then it's to the wall/ Lil' Jon, he always tells the truth"), it's clear this band knows its melanin. If that sounds a tad anthropological, the joy of this debut is that it never feels it. The Afro-pop and indie rock fusion is seamless, particularly on "A-Punk" and "Cape Cod Kwassa Kwassa," which includes the lyrical deprecation "This feels so unnatural/ Peter Gabriel too." More than most new bands, Vampire Weekend knows how to find a song's soul without compromising its wit. Peter Gabriel would be proud. Paul Simon would be prouder.
6. 808s & Heartbreak
by Kanye West
Imagine if you took an album's worth of blues lyrics and removed all the blues. That's what West does on this hastily produced record about the death of his mother and the dissolution of his recent engagement. The words are brutally introspective ("Chased the good-life, all my life long/ Look back on my life, all my life gone") but they're sung through the anonymity of Auto-Tune over beats generated mostly by the ancient Roland TR-808 Rhythm Composer, one of the first drum machines, so you'd expect their power to be muted. Instead, West turns his gimmick into an innovation; the effects make him sound ghostly and sad (and better, since he can't actually sing). Not everything on 808s & Heartbreak works, but what does is fascinating — and haunting.
7. Santogold
by Santogold
Santi White spent years as an A&R executive before making her solo debut, and her seasoning, as well as her taste, shows. Mining poses from Gwen Stefani, Bjork and Grace Jones, and melodies from New Wave, pop and whatever else her laptop spits out, she creates a new persona — "a black girl who's not singing R&B," is how she puts it, tongue firmly in cheek. She's also a fusionist who knows influences don't mean a thing if you ain't learned to sing. And sing she can, with a voice flexible enough to sound like her friend M.I.A. on "Shove It" and Blondie on "L.E.S. Artistes." "Creep up and suddenly/ I found myself/ An innovator," she rasps on the latter; for now her innovation is pastiche, but you get the sense there's more, and even better, coming.
8. Third
by Portishead
After a 10-year hiatus, Bristol's once famous trip-hop trio returned with an album that was less accessible — and far prettier — than their previous work. Packed with a Portuguese soliloquy, austere Krautrock rhythms and muscular synthesizer melodies, the first half-hour is more impressive than lovable. Then the ukuleles begin. It sounds like a joke at first, but "Deep Water" gives Beth Gibbons the chance to sing her wounded heart out and create a little island of prettiness that blooms into more prettiness the rest of the way. Third takes multiple listens to crack, but it rewards patience with a textured majesty.
9. Little Honey
by Lucinda Williams
After years in misery's ditch, Williams finally put out a happy album, but it's a little more nuanced than its publicity. Songs like "Tears of Joy" and the grinding guitar-rocker "Real Love," show off a singer no longer ill at ease with easy pleasures (although, uncharacteristically, she's suddenly at ease with lyrical cliché) while the Elvis Costello duet "Jailhouse Tears" proves she can even be funny. For all the smiles, there's also plenty of material where the mood darkens. "Circles and X's" and the glorious "Wishes Were Horses" ("If wishes were horses/ I'd have a ranch") get Williams back to longing, territory where she's unrivaled as a writer and unbeatable as a singer. The balance, though, makes this Williams' sweetest album.
10. Rockferry
by Duffy
Because Aimee Ann Duffy is young, British and has a rocket-powered voice that seems to find its natural expression in '60s soul music, the Amy Winehouse comparisons are inevitable. For the record, Winehouse is better. But on "Rockferry" and the delicately sweet "Warwick Avenue," Duffy proves she's at least in the game with an impressive display of vocal and emotional range. The album sags a bit toward the end, but its best songs have a captivating innocence that seems born of 24-year-old Duffy herself. On that front, she's got Winehouse beat by miles.
[via TIME]
2008年11月29日
SONG OF THE WEEK #15: Say You Will by Kanye West
西方侃爷在北京演出的时候,我竟然在开场前搞到了一张票。一对男女朋友,想去看,但更想留在 798 看歌德学院的演出。于是,我这个假文艺青年,便骗到了他们手里的 Kanye West 演出券。谢谢,丁丁和高大师。
可惜工体馆这么个小封闭场子里,放了一个室外演出专用的大棚子和音响,我们如古罗马斗兽场里的观众一样看着场下的侃爷折腾,这倒霉孩子身着花裤,所有的音乐都只能在第一排嗡啊嗡,活像一个巨大的苍蝇。结果,看了半场不到,我便和高大师溜出会场,告别假装时尚潮人的 flypig 和 evilape,回到 798 去接着装文青。后来其实也没认真听 Deien Lakaien,这是后话。
去见侃爷之前,他的专辑我都听过,但每张听了也就四五遍,还是印象不深。是的是的,我知道这哥们儿很有思想,但他的歌儿中,没有一首打动过我,直到他离开北京后,发布了 2008 年的新专辑《808's and Heartbreaks》。开头一首 Say You Will 果然很 heartbreaking。Kanye West 在这首歌中,甚至有了点 Kraftwerk 在 The Model 中的风采。唯一的不同是,Kanye 的嗓音温暖了点。这就是泡普音乐的力量吗?
2008年11月27日
SONG OF THE WEEK #14: A Different Place by Brett Anderson
Brett Anderson 现在开始玩慢歌了。其实他早就知道,Suede 时期的慢歌都能杀死人,记得当年来北京演出时,他在接受记者采访中承认过这点,但是他就不老唱慢歌。是呀,何必呢,慢歌唱多了,估计类似一个笑话说了超过三次。一天到晚搞得这么沉郁。但,貌似我这个空间比较爱放慢歌。是因为我照顾读者吗?上次突破了一下,放了一首 Hip Hop,不过也没设为自动播放,嘿嘿。
我还是喜欢 Suede,喜欢 The Tears,尽管 Brett Anderson 和 Bernard Butler 再度合作的结果被很多人都视为失败之作。还是喜欢 Brett Anderson。
来听 Brett Anderson 今年的新专辑《野外》(Wilderness)中的一首“A Different Place” 吧。These are the words that take me to a different place. These are the thoughts that take me to a different place.
好吧,我承认,此刻有点低落。
2008年11月12日
SONG OF THE WEEK #13: Love Makes You Beautiful by Terrence Howard
Terrence Howard,和大部分在娱乐业混迹多年才崛起的演技派男星一样,18 岁开始投身演艺事业,36 岁才真正成名。那部让他牛鼻非凡的电影叫《川流熙攘》(Hustle & Flow),其实这名字翻得不太靠谱,hustle 就是拉皮条,flow 是饶舌音乐的一个术语,指歌词念(rap)出来的节奏。Terrence Howard 演的就是一个被点燃了 Hip Hop 音乐梦想的皮条客,演技了得。如果你喜欢 Eminem 主演的电影《8英里》(8 Miles)以及他在片中唱的主题曲,我非常建议你去找这部《Hustle & Flow》来看看。Terrence Howard 演完这片子的第二年,就被邀请加入了美国电影艺术和科学学会,对的,就是颁发奥斯卡的那群装货。其实头一年这哥们儿就在两部获得奥斯卡奖的电影中扮演了配角,一个是《撞车》(Crash),一个是《灵魂歌王》(Ray)。
电影《Hustle & Flow》的主题曲《It’s Hard Out Here for a Pimp》是第一首在奥斯卡颁奖典礼上表演的 Hip Hop 歌曲,也是第二首获得奥斯卡最佳电影音乐奖项的 Hip Hop 歌曲(第一个就是《8英里》的主题曲“Lose Yourself”)。这首歌的确是我听过的最好听的 Hip Hop 歌曲,曲子开头用廉价的儿童玩具鼓机的一段节奏带入,暗合剧情。然后女主角 Taraji P. Henson 牵出主歌,Taraji 的嗓音极具爆发力,也极动人。那首歌我就不自动播放了,也放在下面,感兴趣的朋友自己点开听一下。提醒:是 Hip Hop!
所以今天放出两首歌,自动播放的这首,是 Terrence Howard 在今年 9 月 1 日发的一张新碟。是的,在美国可不时兴演戏牛鼻了就出唱片。人家干一行是一行,串行一般都会被骂,不像咱这边。当然了,那边的唱片公司也没法花钱买通媒体和网站给新唱片说好话。
尽管如此,我得说,Terrence Howard 的这张《Shine Through It》是我今年听过的最好听的 Soul/R&B 专辑。很爱情,很希望,很低郁。这哥们儿会唱歌。今天放的“Love Makes You Beautiful”是专辑的第一首歌,立即击败我。
2008年9月13日
Love Songs
朋友结婚,让我帮他找在婚礼上适合播放的爱情歌曲做背景音乐。我于是从收藏的所有音乐中,一张专辑一张专辑地过滤,地毯式排查,挑出了 30 首来。给他。这就是下面 30 首歌曲的来源。
做事好像向来不在意结果。11 月 2 日去参加他的婚礼,听到了我选送的曲目,顿觉自豪无比,当时费的多少功夫就都不记得了。