Posts Tagged ‘Electronica’

In Electronica We Trust

Sunday, February 7th, 2010

Most Sun­days I wake up usu­ally around mid day — after­noon. Some Sun­days I wake up and feel like lis­ten­ing to pop all day: while show­er­ing, poo­ing, doing the dishes, star­ing into space, etc. Some Sun­days I like to drink cof­fee and lis­ten to Mozart on spo­tify. Some (select) Sun­days I don’t even wake up at all. It’s like a void in my life where noth­ing hap­pens in antic­i­pa­tion of every­thing that must hap­pen the fol­low­ing day.

This Sun­day, while some go to wor­ship at church, I feel like doing my wor­ship­ping at the church of Elec­tron­ica. Today’s ser­mon will be car­ried out by Thieves Like Us, a Swedish-American trio who com­bine dark elec­tronic beats with non­cha­lant shoegaze vocals. When you leave this place you will find in you a new­found faith in Electronica.

Right-click + save as to down­load files below. If you can’t be both­ered to sit through the entire ser­mon, click here to down­load every­thing in one go.

1. Thieves Like Us — Drugs In My Body

2. Thieves Like Us — Drugs In My Body (Just A Band Remix)

3. Thieves Like Us — Your Heart Feels

4. Thieves Like Us — Fur Judith

5. Thieves Like Us — Really Like To See You Again

6. Thieves Like Us — Never Known Love

7. Thieves Like Us — Fass

also pub­lished at Oh Really?

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Monsterpuss, Meoww, Monsterpuss

Thursday, January 21st, 2010

Have you ever fan­ta­sized about own­ing a tiger as a pet? I know I have, so you can imag­ine my joy when I read this arti­cle today. Appar­ently the Indone­sian gov­ern­ment has decided to legal­ize the domes­ti­ca­tion of Suma­tran tigers in an effort to encour­age breed­ing and there­fore avoid extinction.

There is a catch though. Well, many, in fact. The tigers have to be bought in pairs, and they will cost you a down pay­ment of 1billion Rupiah — which is sort of like £50,000 or $33,333 — fol­lowed by a yearly tax for the gov­ern­ment (who knows what for?). You will also be required to own at least 5000 square meters of land for the tigers to freely romp around in.

Although I’m (obvi­ously) excited about this new devel­op­ment, I’m doubt­ful of how suc­cess­ful this plan will work out. By the end of this cen­tury, Suma­tran tigers will prob­a­bly be fully domes­ti­cated by their rich and bored own­ers. They will become noth­ing more than just great big cats. Surely that will fuck up the food chains within their orig­i­nal habi­tats. What if their domes­ti­ca­tion leads to the extinc­tion of other ani­mals? Will we start to domes­ti­cate giraffes, pan­das, and loads of other endan­gered ani­mals too in an effort to try and ‘save’ them? I guess we shall see.

In the mean­time, here’s some music for you to help digest and absorb the shock­ing infor­ma­tion you’ve just been pre­sented with.

right-click save as to down­load or click here for the whole lot

1. Mon­ster­pussy — The Vaselines

2. The Big Pink — Velvet

3. Vivian Girls — Death

4. Silk Flow­ers — Flash of Light

5. Health — Die Slow

6. Deer­hunter — Spring Hall Convert

Also pub­lished at Oh Really?

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(500) Days of Summer

Thursday, September 10th, 2009

This film was alright, for an Amer­i­can rom-com. It was like an Amer­i­can attempt at Amelie. Basi­cally, main­stream pro­duc­ers are finally acknowl­edg­ing that there is a big ‘indie’ mar­ket to cater to out there; a 17 — 30something demo­graphic that is too large to ignore and are no longer impressed with things that are not infused with the indie ethos / art­house feel. Greed­ily, though, the pro­duc­ers still wanted the film to be main­stream enough for every­one to watch, hence the debat­able cheese-factor of this film. Plot-wise it was like a super con­cen­trated, more real­is­tic ver­sion of He’s Just Not That Into You, where the female held the power in rela­tion­ships and the audi­ence were privy only to the thoughts and emo­tions of the male pro­tag­o­nist. It was another one of those, omg-so-love-isn’t-real(butitreallyis)!? films that I think are sup­posed to enlighten men and women across the world, giv­ing them mod­ern per­spec­tive on romance. Nev­er­the­less, Zooey Deschanel is gor­geous and Joseph Gordon-Levitt is super adorable. Those are rea­sons enough for me.

She & Him is a folk band formed by Deschanel in col­lab­o­ra­tion with M. Ward. For those of you who are already famil­iar with Deschanel’s charms on screen, expect just as much from her song writ­ing and singing in She & Him, com­ple­mented by M. Ward’s all encom­pass­ing greatness.

Django Django is a very, very new trio with only 3064 plays reg­is­tered on Last.fm the last time I checked. Their mis­chievi­ously fun and super catchy song Default has become a sta­ple addi­tion to my sum­mer­time playlist.

Braids is a Cana­dian exper­i­men­tal ensem­ble for­merly named The Neigh­bour­hood Coun­cil. My favourite track of theirs is Liver and Tan. It’s post-rock elec­tron­ica at its very best. If you like Explo­sions in the Sky, you will Love Braids. (PS — yet ANOTHER amaz­ing band with a token asian female mem­ber… what did I tell you?)

Wild Beasts are pure ear sex. Sorry, I can’t even describe with words how much I love this group. They played at Off­set fes­ti­val this week­end that just passed and I’m so gut­ted I missed them, I’m still mourn­ing. They put Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes, Mod­est Mouse (insert any other ‘good’ folk­tron­ica bands you know here) to utter shame, mak­ing you never want to lis­ten to them ever again because you’ve found some­thing way, way better.

Zola Jesus singer-songwriter Nika Roza Danilova is only a year younger than me, and that pisses me off so much. Because how can some­one that young be so amaz­ing? I loved her album, The Spoils, so much I actu­ally went on iTunes to buy the whole thing. Yes, me, the biggest free­loader ever. I don’t think I’ve ever bought and down­loaded a WHOLE album off iTunes since … oh my god, I think this may well be the very first time I’ve done that. She sounds like Yeah Yeah Yeahs on hal­lu­cino­gens, recorded on way less sophis­ti­cated equip­ment but sound­ing beyond bet­ter. Clay Bod­ies has already enjoyed mul­ti­ple replays in my playlist. Please get her album.

The xx are the epit­ome of dark, emo­tive pop. Pop that doesn’t even sound like pop. The kind of pop you could lis­ten to with­out get­ting has­sled by your extremely anti-pop, indie post-punk group of hyper-chic friends. You can actu­ally go to a social gath­er­ing and proudly say, hey guys, I’ve been lis­ten­ing to The xx, and expect warm pats of approval on your back.

MP3s (click on link to pre­view, right click save as to download)

1. She & Him — Why Do You Let Me Stay Here

2. Django Django — Default

3. Braids — Liver and Tan

4. Wild Beasts — Devil’s Crayon

5. Zola Jesus — Clay Bodies

6. The xx — Infinity

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