Archive for the 'Music Review' Category

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Album Review: Sister Kinderhook by Rasputina

Dear Melora,

Melora, if you’re reading this, there’s a reason I’m writing this as a break up letter. I’m trying to figure out if the problem here is me. Like many of your fans, I’ve been following Rasputina for more than a decade and it’s been interesting watching you grow as an artist. You keep trying new things to keep your music fresh and relevant. You’ve also been through a lot of band members, and in addition released a solo record as Melora Creager.

I fell in love with you the first time I heard “Dig Ophelia”. I thrilled in a white trashy way when you sang “Trenchmouth”. You broke my heart so deftly with “Hunter’s Kiss”, having first announced that it would be a sad story, and I watched admiringly from a distance when you sang “Saline the Salt Lake Queen”. I agreed with you when you stated that the cello is the saddest instrument. Your solo album was interesting but also kind of forgettable, but then O Perilous World came along with some really good songs and an interesting idea. And I was happy.

And now Sister Kinderhook. Like most of the rest of your albums, the songs can be broken into four categories: 1) The brilliant songs we love you for. 2) Some songs that are OK and might be the ones we like later when we get tired of the ones we liked first. 3) A few songs that are mostly amazing but have something really annoying about them (like the frenetic part of “Draconian Crackdown”, which is otherwise rocking). 4) One or two real stinkers. Please note that only one of your albums has no stinkers. That is as much a product of your experimentation as anything else, and when I buy your albums I don’t mind the stinkers because the rest is always so interesting.

Can I tell you that there isn’t anybody else I know of anywhere who is doing what you do? There are some bands that can be compared, but you are very unique.

I read a discussion on a fan site where some people were talking about whether or not you were going to drag out the dulcimer again. The point being that the dulcimer was really grating. And don’t get me wrong – there is something intrinsically grating about your music. Sometimes that’s a good thing, like in “Saline” or “Crosswalk”. Other times, not so much. Like in “The 2 Miss Leavens” which is grating and (I think it’s best to be blunt here) boring. I pre-ordered Sister Kinderhook and got the fan, thank you. Then I listened to the album some. And then stopped listening to it. Then I listened to it some more. Then I stopped listening to it. Then I tried listening to it on shuffle with the other Rasputina albums. Here are my thoughts.

I love love love “Sweet Sister Temperance” and “Meant to be Dutch”. “Dutch” in particular makes me think of Chinese railroad laborers and theremin. The tracks “Kinderhook Hoopskirt Works” and “Afternoon of the Fawn” are good. “Kinderhook Hoopskirt Works” suffers in that it’s the same flavor as “Shirtwaist Fire” and “My Orphanage” but isn’t quite as good. “Utopian Society” is funny and I love the accent. The song is like “My Captivity by Savages” or “Kate Moss” so it ends up getting limited play time with me, being a novelty song. I have to be honest with you that the rest of the album is a little tedious. In the middle. For a long time. I read that you wanted to get back to your roots and I think this album proves that you can never really go home. Not really. And yet the music does mesh well with your other albums so maybe it’s something else. I don’t know. I’ve been spending some time trying to figure out if it’s YOU, of if it’s ME. Maybe I’ve become jaded. I’m wishing for some more cello. I don’t really feel like you’re rocking out on this album, and there something missing. Some extra X factor.

Can I tell you again that there isn’t anybody else I know of anywhere who is doing what you do? I think everyone should listen to your music. I plan to see you when you come to Portland, and no, the love affair isn’t really over. But I’m feeling jaded and blue.

Sister Kinderhook by Rasputina – Filthy Bonnet – 2010
Buy Sister Kinderhook on Amazon

See you next time!

Dark Music Review: Into the Land of Phantoms – Jill Tracy

Into the Land of PhantomsImagine this: It’s Halloween night and you’re in a movie house in San Francisco to see F.W. Murnau’s 1922 silent vampire movie Nosferatu. Sound good? Now let’s say that in addition a live band will be accompanying the movie, and they’ve been doing it for years with music they composed themselves to go with the movie. Sound good? If you’re like me it sounds awesome!

Too bad we both missed it. On the plus side, there’s a recording of the 2001 showing, so you can at least imagine you’re there. Meet Into the Land of Phantoms by Jill Tracy and the Malcontent Orchestra. I first discovered this album while looking for some new music on one of those sites where you tell it what you like and then it gives you suggestions for other music you might like. Can I tell you this kind of thing never works for me because my musical tastes are too dark? Really. I’m not bragging. The iTunes genius? They need to send some Apple engineers to the Dark House because my music collection has the iTunes genius scratching its head in the back of its cave. So yeah, this kind of thing usually either suggests that I would really like the song “Lullaby” by The Cure (which is crap – I hate that song) or it never works for me, except this one time.

Jill Tracy at the piano

Jill Tracy at the piano

I listened to some of the album and was drooling immediately for more and had to buy it. Here’s the deal: You know Brian Eno’s ambient albums? Like his album Music for Airports? Well this is like that but more like Music for a Creepy Vampire Movie. That’s what I like: Take a great idea and turn out the lights. Nobody is singing about their broken heart or that they kissed a girl. It was recorded live at the theater while the movie was playing and thus has a “real” feel to it which sounds like the band is right there next to you. The music is deliciously atmospheric and moody. There are parts where sunny people do sunny things. There are parts where the ship is overrun by rats. In some tracks you can hear the cackling of Renfield, in others you hear the weird speed of the Count’s carriage, and the stalking of Nina and Harker. There are shadows that do one thing while their owner does something else.

There are two problems with this recording. Problem number 1 is that it’s broken up into 38 tracks that are only a minute to two minutes long, which must have made sense to somebody, but doesn’t work out so hot on your iPod when it’s set to shuffle. Problem number 2 is that the whole score is not included on the CD, so you can’t play it on your stereo while watching the movie on your TV. I know because I tried! My dream is that some day in the future somebody will release a DVD with this music and the movie in sync.

In the meantime, this makes great background music for other activities. Put it on and maybe cut out some snowflakes. Write about your broken heart or how you kissed a girl. Or maybe turn out the lights and imagine being stalked by Max Schreck.

Creepy Factor: 4 out of 5
Suspense Factor: 2 out of 5
Weird Erotic Tension Factor: Only if someone else is naked there while you listen.

Final result: If you like strange or dark music this will fit right in with your collection.

Into the Land of PhantomsJill Tracy and the Malcontent Orchestra125 Records – 2001

Check out this album on iTunes
Jill Tracy and The Malcontent Orchestra - Into the Land of Phantoms

The flying monkeys let our technician out for a minute and he snuck away into the light of day. Thanks for your patience during this difficult transition.
I ated Tinkerbell.

Fhtagn Spoken Here.

... the attic, a vast raftered length lighted only by small blinking windows in the gable ends, and filled with a massed wreckage of chests, chairs, and spinning-wheels which infinite years of deposit had shrouded and festooned into monstrous and hellish shapes.
The Shunned House
H.P. Lovecraft




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