Video: John Darnielle, The Sign

This is John Darnielle of the Mountain Goats doing an acoustic cover of the Ace of Base song The Sign. It is absolutely glorious and having watched this I now love him three times as much as I did before, for both his ongoing personal awesomeness and for his abiding love for Ace of Base.

I also learned that the lyric is “love is demanding / without understanding” and not “love is demanding / rhythm to understanding” which means I have been singing the wrong thing all of these years. Whoops!
 

(21/22) the Mountain Goats - The Sign (Live at Bottom of the Hill 3/2/2008)

Video: The Rest, Always On My Mind

Always On My Mind is absolutely my favorite song from The Rest‘s SEESAW, so I was very excited when a link for the video below appeared in my inbox.

The video itself is kind of weird but in an awesome way. I can’t decide if it’s a love story, a ghost story, a murder mystery, or all of those things at the same time, but it’s beautifully shot and lit and contains my favorite romance trope, which is young lovers dancing in their living room.

They also spend a good deal of time wearing giant animal masks and wandering mournfully through fog, which is really just the slightly hallucinatory cherry on top.
 

The Rest - Always On My Mind

Video Mix: Madeleine Peyroux, Skyzoo, Everything Everything

 

A handful of videos to pique your interest today. We start with the lead single from Madeleine Peyroux’s forthcoming album The Blue Room. It’s a sweet, jazzy, strolling take on Buddy Holly’s “Changing All Those Changes”. The Blue Room releases in March, followed by a tour. Check her official site for more information.

“Changing All Those Changes” – Madeleine Peyroux

 

Next up, Skyzoo pays tribute iconic filmmaker Spike Lee, with a verse from the man, Talib Kweli. It features rapid-fire spitting, majestic horns, and a truly lovely piano outro.

“Spike Lee Was My Hero” – Skyzoo, featuring Talib Kweli

 

Now shake the end-of-the-week dust off with the super danceable “Cough Cough” by UK band Everything Everything. It comes from their EP of the same name, their US debut, which is set for release on February 5. The band will be playing SXSW, followed by shows at the Roxy in L.A. and the Bowery Ballroom in NYC.

“Cough Cough” – Everything Everything

Video: El Sportivo & The Blooz, Waking World

There are people – most people – who are out and about during the day. And then there are the night people, the nocturnal wanderers, who only ever see the supermarket at 3AM, when it’s empty. There are times when these people walk past each other, on their way to and from their lives; the magic hour(s) of dawn and sunset marking the shift change.

Sometimes they change places, their schedules get flipped, and they are left to wonder: which one of us fell down the rabbit hole?
 

El Sportivo & The Blooz "Waking World"

 
El Sportivo & The Blooz Official Website

El Sportivo & The Blooz on Facebook

Video: Mail the Horse, Do You Still Come Home?

I reckoned I should start the new year by sharing some NEW music with y’all. Or at least new to me; this song is from Great Kills, a record that Mail the Horse put out this past September.

They’re from Brooklyn via New Hampshire; I learned about them because they were one of the openers for the Felice Brothers’ New Years Eve show at the Mercury Lounge. They were a little bit jammy, a little bit bluesy, a little bit country and all delicious.

I’ll be posting pictures from the show soon, but until then, here they are with Do You Still Come Home? via the TinyRadars Cow House Video Sessions:
 

Mail the Horse: Do You Still Come Home? (TinyRadars Cow House Series)

Report from a Listening Party: Black Veil Brides, Wretched and Divine

Wretched and Divine: The Story of the Wild Ones is album number three for Black Veil Brides.

As a quick introduction to their current aesthetic, here’s the video for the first single, In the End, which dropped on Wednesday:
 


 

The rest of Wretched and Divine is due out in early January, and will be accompanied by a movie called Legion of the Black.

Buying a ticket for the New York premiere of Legion of the Black was what led to me being one of the lucky people who got to attend a listening party for Wretched and Divine today.

We got to listen to it all the way through one time. The following notes and observations are based on that single hearing:

  • This record is big, in the sense that it is ambitious, and in the sense that it contains multitudes. It is expansive, but not bloated, and heavy, at times, but not ponderous.

    One of my notes on I Am Bulletproof, the first song, was WHAMMO guitar time! More punch than drag; heavy drums, lots of shredding, but cohesive, which I feel is a reasonable summation of the song and most of the record as well.

    Main point of divergence between the record and the song: the record has more fancy strings.

  • Familiar BVB themes – unity of rebels and outcasts, celebrating your life, standing tall in the face of adversity, getting up even when mean people knock you down – are there, but given shapes and faces which I suspect will become more concerete to me once I have seen the accompanying movie.

    Religious / inspirational language and themes, which echoed through BVB’s earlier records are front and center here, though, I agree with Kerrang!‘s assessment: they haven’t turned into Stryper.

    The faith they are talking about seems much more general and amorphous, perhaps somewhat like the faith that powers the Bene Gesserit Litany Against Fear, than one that springs from adherence to a specific religion.

    There’s also certain amount of intersectionality of artforms – music vs film vs film musical / musical film vs rock opera / concept record – that I want to come back to later, once I have experienced both works.

  • Songs that are most likely to be pit sing-alongs / jump-athons, in order of appearance: New Year’s Day (heavy bass drum intro, like a heartbeat, finished with a dollop of fancy violin); We Don’t Belong (glitchier, more electronic, drums more understated); Devil’s Choir (martial, parade-like beat and skirling shredding that smooths out to support the shout-along chorus).
  • Overture is the instrumental number at the halfway line. It is lovely combination of fancy violins and rolling, thunderous drums, and if it is not the centerpiece of someone’s ballet recital / senior dance project this spring I am going to be sad.
  • There are two ballads: Done With You which is gentle and subdued, and Lost It All which starts out with some doomy piano and then expands and soars into classic metal ballad territory. For the latter I made a “hand -> staple -> forehead” note, but that is because my affection is both sincere and snarky. It really is a lovely song.
  • Shadows Die (fancy picking, dull thunderous drums that build to a raging torrent) and Nobody’s Hero (dirty bluesy bassline) struck me as the most “traditionally” metal in form, if not in content; the latter went on just a hair too long.

After the record was over, we got to watch five minutes of the movie – my appetite for the rest is suitably whetted – and after that the room was shocked in to stunned silence when the door popped open and BVB lead singer Andy Biersack walked in. The visit that followed as all the sweeter for having been totally unexpected.

In summary: the record was good, I can’t wait to hear it again, and it was an A++ evening overall.

Video: Tina Turner, What’s Love Got To Do With It

Tina Turner turned 73 yesterday, so this is both a belated birthday celebration and a general appreciation.

What’s Love Got To Do With It is from Private Dancer (1984); the song won three Grammys in 1985 and the original video got an MTV video award, also in 1985.

I’m pretty sure I became a Tina Turner fan in that year too, partially because of the music, and partially because she was Aunty Entity, Queen of Bartertown. If you haven’t watched Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome, GO DO IT NOW.

Meanwhile, the video you are about to watch is from her last tour, in 2009. I can only hope to be as fierce as she is when I am her age.
 

Video: Fall Out Boy, Sugar We’re Going Down

Fall Out Boy didn’t play Fueled by Ramen’s 15th anniversary shows last fall, but they were there in spirit, via the music between sets. At some point during night two, this song came on over the PA.

I was deep in the crowd, half listening, half trying to wriggle into a better spot, when I noticed a female voice in the chorus that I was pretty sure hadn’t been there before. I actually spent 30 seconds trying to remember if they had pulled someone in to guest vocals – Maja Ivarsson from The Sounds, maybe? – before the penny dropped.

It wasn’t Maja.

It was the room.

It was hundreds of girls – including me – singing along so loudly they had become one voice, soaring and swooping and almost drowning Patrick Stump out. And it remains one of my favorite concert memories.

This video is from 2006, and is a classic FOB dash of visual absurdity.

 

Video: Little Jackie, 31 Flavors

The holiday season is upon us, and with it, long car trips in which my sister and I get to explore the contents of each others iPods. On our most recent voyage, I got a One Direction song stuck in her head, and she introduced me to Little Jackie, aka Imani Coppola (no relation to Francis Ford!) and Adam Pallin.

This song is from their second record, Made4TV. I love this video because it is beautifully shot, and the song because it is sexy and snarky at the same time. Coppola is also a solo artist, so if you like her voice be sure to grab all of her work!