I hate you with all of my heart / I hate you with all of my art
January 19, 2020

Smart and darkly funny political commentary on AJJ's new album 'Good Luck Everybody'

"AJJ have rolled up so many things that are wrong with our society and tackled them head-on without metaphor, in a darkly funny, near-stream-of-consciousness way... It always sounds like smart and incisive commentary, and still functions as enjoyable music even when you’re sick of political commentary" - Brooklyn Vegan says in a review of new album by American folk-punk band AJJ.

Critics really like Bill Fay's new album 'Countless Branches'. They say that "it’s a lot to take in, and fresh corridors reveal themselves with each listen", and a "masterpiece". English folk singer-songwriter used mostly just his voice, piano, and a guitar to record it, but that was enough - "he sounds best at his most intimate".

"Lack of predictability is what's kept them vital" - PopMatters says in a review of 'Nijimusy', new album by the noise-rock-jazz band OOIOO. The Japanese four-some is an "astonishingly talented band that can often be jarring, unsettling, and even occasionally off-putting. But their spirit of innovation and originality is always present. And they are never, ever boring".

In 2015 two musicians and lecturers, Johny Lamb (who records as Thirty Pounds of Bone) and Philip Reeder took a trip on a trawler called the Girl Mary. They brought instruments and recording gear along with them and recorded folk songs about the sea while on the boat. The sounds of the ocean and the gulls are heard throughout, as well as the creaking of the hull, a helicopter (apparently belonging to the coastguard), something that could be a mechanical winch. The result - 25 minutes of beautifully sad fishermen songs on 'Still Every Year They Went', straight from the sea.

'Diatom Ribbons' is the most ambitious project to date by Canadian jazz pianist and composer Kris Davis, but also "her most accessible and inviting". How so? "Incorporating elements of hip-hop, rock, and groove music... with voices, with horns, with electric guitars, with hip-hop techniques, with complex time signatures, and with butt-moving grooves", and with help […]

Full title of new album by the pop-metal band is actually ‘Music to listen to~dance to~blaze to~pray to~feed to~sleep to~talk to~grind to~trip to~breathe to~help to~hurt to~scroll to~roll to~love to~hate to~learn Too~plot to~play to~be to~feel to~breed to~sweat to~dream to~hide to~live to~die to~GO TO’, it lasts equally long 85 minutes (in 8 songs), and it goes further […]

Based in Tel Aviv, El Khat have members from Yemen, Iraq, Poland, and Morocco, playing "international folk fusion music" influenced mostly by traditional Yemeni music. PopMatters says their album 'Saadia Jefferson' is "a heartfelt expression of love for a culture brutally disenfranchised, as well as one of the potential of that same culture to continue […]

Zeta

Brooklyn Vegan made a selection of best screamo albums from 2019. Not a perfect selection, but a good start. There is: Zeta with their mix of screamo, post-hardcore, prog, psychedelia, jazz, and experimental rock on 'Mochima'; Shin Guard who started out with emo, and got to it's "nastier cousin screamo" on '2020'; Frail Body are cross-over with […]

Brooklyn Vegan first got to know about John Myrtle through 'Lodge 49' soundtrack, thinking he was some obscure 1960s guy. Turns out - he's a young London singer/songwriter. They brought him up because he is "charming, all within the well-dressed jaunty psych pop world... John’s got the perfect warm, slightly reedy voice for this kind […]

YouTube screenshot

Last month Scarypoolparty released his debut album 'Exit Form' where "he blends the moody, bold electro-rock of Nine Inch Nails with powerful and sincere vocals that bring to mind fellow Idol runner-up Adam Lambert", the Guardian says. Shore Fire like the album even more - "showcases Aranda’s musical and emotional range, expertly fusing fast-paced walls of […]

"There is nothing about any of these songs that screams: dashed off or afterthought. This is the real deal and far superior to any rock music I can think of right now that was slaved over in a $$$$ studio over the course of weeks" - the Quietus says in a great article about the […]

"'Labyrinth' is a site for self discovery: a place to get lost in and emerge with a new understanding of yourself" - Exclaim writes about debut album Doom Kanda, a visual artist who's worked with Björk, Arca and FKA twigs. Wire likes it even more - "gorgeous melodies and electroacoustic layers that skip and skitter between […]

The Quietus has a very interesting review of 'The Outside In', about No Bra’s "queer blurring of intentionally artless delivery and (quote-unquote) ‘arty’ style. No Bra’s music appears artless; and it appears so precisely inasmuch as it’s arty. No Bra sounds roundly, soundly, flagrantly artless, and roundly, soundly, flagrantly arty. This paradox – it’s arty inasmuch as […]

Robert Hood began his career with Underground Resistance, a Detroit collective known for its bold, anti-corporate vision of techno. Today, he lives in Alabama and works as an ordained minister. On his second Floorplan album with his daughter Lyric, Pitchfork says, they sharpen their focus on the fusion of house music and gospel - "'Supernatural' […]

"Raw, melodic and imaginative black metal... nothing short of a sublime sonic experience" - Metal Injection writes in a review of 'The Palms of Sorrowed Kings' by Obsequiae. Angry Metal Guy calls it "a great album, featuring a stellar collection of dynamic, richly textured and memorable songs", and Brooklyn Vegan appreciates how accessible it is […]

"'Cotillions' is basically Billy making his version of a folk/country/Americana album, and at this point in his career, it’s more exciting to hear him do this than rehash '90s Smashing Pumpkins songs... It’s one of the few times in his career that he didn’t make a lofty, ambitious album. It turns out Billy Corgan can be pretty good […]

"Anyone will thrill to Russell, whose ability to anchor wandering thought with melodic resolution is as strong as Bob Dylan’s" - Guardian said about 'Iowa Dream', a compilation of Arthur Russell's demos, mostly from the 1970. What sets this electronic pioneer is his "guileless stance, staring up at the world in confusion, hurt and wonder". […]

American sympho black-metal band Abigail Williams have added cello on their latest album 'Walk Beyond the Dark' which made Brooklyn Vegan take this album out - "cello parts really dominate this one in a very effective way, and the beauty of the cello mixed with the intensity that the rest of the band brings makes […]

1 6 7 8 9 10 14