Thursday, December 06, 2007

Existentialism and the Expanding of the Universe


Recent Headline:
Chimps Beat College Students at Guitar Hero III:
Yes it's true. Not only did they nail the licks on more critical song selection, they seem to be outscoring humans on certain memory tests as well. A recent archeological find appears to depict ancient chimps gathered around a crude fondue, and next March for the first time a chimp will compete in the New York Time's crossword puzzle tournament.
The unfinished watercolor of Jimi Hendrix (12"x8") is from a few years ago, and was painted with thin washes of color. Much in the way an oil painting would be laid in with glazes of paint. In either medium the drawback is the amount of time necessary to follow a peice through. Though Jimi deserves better than his uncompleted status.
In light of the last, recent distraction from fresh Press postings we try to offer our 2007 Albums of the Year. Though it must first be admitted that we did not get around to the new Sigur Ros, Animal Collective, Neil Young... but we will.

2007 Albums of the Year:

Honorable Mention: King Crimson: The Collectable King Crimson Vol. 2: Belew's first live gig as Discipline in Bath, England (1981), drawn from a restored cassette recording. Also a Philadelphia gig from July 30th 1982. Excellent quality, great liner notes, we all should be drinking the Robert Fripp cool aid.
5. Explosions In The Sky: All Of a Sudden I Miss Everyone However you brand this type of avant-instrumental rock, this outfit has taken the helm. Everything I've ever heard from them is tight and original. It all comes down to if you got the palette.
4. Adrian Belew: Side 4 Lucky enough to see this tour at B.B. King's Time'S Square Aug. 8th, 2006, I can tell you that this is the 2nd best thing. Julie, and Eric Slick make up his Power Trio, and they rip through the first three sides, hit some classic Belew, and visit the Crimso years as well. I feel like ordering the grouper fingers, and an Amstel every time I listen to it.
3. Modest Mouse: We Were Dead Before The Ship Even Sank The addition of Johnny Marr to Modest Mouse was like adding triple sec to your favorite boozy concoction with a hint of fruit. It smoothes it out. No matter what Isaac Brock puts out, it's something to be considered, and here he has a few tunes that to me are amoung his best. Mixed within another smattering of what should be America's most popular band.
2. Iron and Wine: The Shepard's Dog Listening to this album is the equivilant of spending a late evening amoungst good friends. The dust blown off contemplative moments, raucous times, and the black bear claw that took grandma's dog. If the musical element wasn't intriguing enough, the enclosed lyric poster will bring it on home. An essential contemporary rock album.
1. Robert Wyatt: Comicopera: Whatever may come out between now and Jan. 1st could not top this album as the most important work of the year. Though I guess if I had a machine that could travel through time and still write this column, I would say that every time Robert Wyatt released an album. Though the present release puts Garcia Lorca to music, gets some Enotronic treatment, got some Paul Weller, Phil Manzanera, and even Dave Sinclair playing piano on a track. I dont want to give it all away, as you should make it a point to put this in your collection. No matter who you are.
Happy Holidays.