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Author Topic: The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening  (Read 959863 times)

Albatron

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1500 on: 18 Apr 2009, 09:20 »

Working For a Nuclear Free City - Business Men & Ghosts

Not even a minute into "Troubled Son" and I am addicted. This is fucking great.

yeah they're badass, Turns out they're on sordo, their other album is self titled and they've got a "Rocket" Ep.

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http://sordomusic.com/db/search.php?q=working+for+a+nuclear+free+city
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Avec

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1501 on: 18 Apr 2009, 09:32 »

Karl Sanders - Saurian Exorcisms

Kali Ma file was broken; just letting you know.
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Avec

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1502 on: 18 Apr 2009, 10:42 »

"Hey, Avec, I really like Voxtrot, Belle & Sebastian, and Camerca Obscura. Do you know anyone that has that sounds similar or has the same awesome indie rock feel?"

Hell yeah, check out The Math And Physics Club - S/T album.



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Freddybear

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1503 on: 18 Apr 2009, 15:51 »

Here is some Thelonious Monk, in chronological order...

Thank you very much for those. Delightful stuff.
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medicatesleep

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1504 on: 18 Apr 2009, 17:22 »




Black Flag - Slip It In
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http://www.mediafire.com/download.php?1myjmygkmk2

It's still better than 82% of bands out there today.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1505 on: 18 Apr 2009, 19:06 »

Hell yeah, check out The Math And Physics Club - S/T

About three songs in, and really enjoying this. Thanks!
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Krylancello

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1506 on: 18 Apr 2009, 23:44 »

I'm back!  More power metal!

Bloodbound's new album due to be released in a week (or two, not sure)




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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1507 on: 18 Apr 2009, 23:46 »


Quote
Rules:

No hot-linking images or albums. You can re-host images at http://imageshack.us.

Ensure your tags are correct and that you have specified both Artist/Album in your post.

Upload your files in either a .zip or a .rar archive to mediaf!re.com, in multiple parts if the album is over 100mbs. The reason for this is that we know mediaf!re is safe and efficient and allows multiple downloads. The ads on other sites, such as Sendspace, are known to contain viruses on the page. Get yourself checked out.

Post your link using code tags. It's the # icon above the policeman emoticon. This prevents the links from being traced back to the forums, lowering the chance that the wrong people notice the thread, potentially threatening Jeph with legal action.

Also, please do NOT request albums. This includes requests for re-uploads; if you miss it, try looking for it somewhere else.

Repost the rules at the top of each new page.
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bulldawg982

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1508 on: 19 Apr 2009, 07:26 »

The Owls

The Owls



Quote
Indie Rock is Important. No city embodies that tragicomic claim like Chicago. Thrill Jockey-- the silly coven of haughty and eminently geeky indie-rockers with unbearable jazz pretensions and its arsenal of post-every-fucking-thing-under-the-sun nomenclature-- has consistently been the most egregious of the Second City's many labels vying for real-life importance, your serious esteem, and of course, CD and show-ticket dollars. But while the über-musicianly Sir John McEntire and his Knights of Bucktown have been out wielding Powerbooks, Kinsella(s) Inc. has been steadily building an empire of pretension.

Sometimes tickling the critics into embarrassing coos of honeyed admiration, and other times inspiring equally disproportionate rock-crit fatwas, Tim Kinsella has succeeded where other Illini have failed: in disarming the full fury of his detractors with nothing more than a smirk. I'm not talking, of course, about Kinsella's actual countenance; I'm referring to his neo-absurdist temperament and the obvious fun with which he goes about his business.

Even when he was just the scratchy-voiced, baby-faced ringmaster of Cap'n Jazz, Tim Kinsella was already establishing himself as a first- (well, maybe second) rate semantic clown and word-gamesman. With a penchant for double-entendre and imagistic jokes, Kinsella charmed his partisans and alienated the rest of us with his Duchampesque disregard for everything, and created a contested little body of work which still polarizes fans of the genre. Personally, Joan of Arc drives me up the fucking wall, but my dismissal of the band has nothing to do with the personality phenomenon of Kinsella; they sorely lacked dynamism, and there were too few hooks and too much blipped-over space for my liking.

Owls reunites the boys from Cap'n Jazz for another stab at the rock. Abthent thith time ith the Promith Ring'th Davey Von Bohlen, but the remaining cast (Tim Kinsella, brother Mike on drums, guitarist Victor Villareal, and bassist Sam Zurick) are back in strong form.

So, too, is Tim Kinsella's jokiness, though that's not such a bad thing. Even the typical, hideously Kinsellated title of "What Whorse You Wrote Id On" doesn't detract from the opening track's elegant mood and almost sing-songy warmth. The guitarwork is nothing short of gorgeous, with Villareal arpeggiating a trebly, spidery path into your aural memory, his picking providing a textural counterpoint to Mike Kinsella's ornate drumming, which it should be said has never sounded this good.

"Anyone Can Have a Good Time" starts quietly and jangly over a semi-marshal beat in non-standard time. Things seem to be meandering, only to find anchorage in what passes for a refrain. The tonally challenged Kinsella spits tick-tocky syllables over one more verse, and after a pleasant mood shift and instrumental interlude, the song's end-section begins. "We fall into patterns quickly/ We fall into patterns too quickly," sings a background Tim Kinsella, as a forefront one screams, "Unname everybody/ Unname everyone," in emo bursts of surprisingly well-hit notes as the song peters out.

"Life in the Hair Salon Themed Bar on the Island" (an apparent reference to Beauty Bar on 14th St. in New York City), is the proggiest of the album's tracks. That is to say, it sounds like indie rock interpreting Frank Zappa influences from something they read in a book. The standout comes with the subsequent song, "I Want the Blidingly Cute to Confide in Me." It encapsulates many of the album's disparate, yet weirdly integrated, strains: its faux-jazzy rhythm excursions, its Andy Summers-on-crack guitar playing, the intermittently truly beautiful vocal melodies, and of course, Kinsella's lyrical shots in the dark.

Owls' music is an odd concoction of opposing and random musical and emotional trajectories. You can hear echoes of Cap'n Jazz and, every bit as clearly, some really weird "adult contemporary" musical phrases, too. The mélange works very well enough, though, and hits the mute button on the death knell so many would like sound on Kinsella's oddly resilient and shapeshifting career. Goddamnit.

— Camilo Arturo Leslie, October 22, 2001

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http://www.mediafire.com/?mzjymzwlam1

Live @ Empty Bottle 07-08-2000

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Live in Athens, Ga 09-28-2001

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Slint - Spiderland


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More known for its frequent name-checks than its actual music, Spiderland remains one of the most essential and chilling releases in the mumbling post-rock arena. Even casual listeners will be able to witness an experimental power-base that the American underground has come to treasure. Indeed, the lumbering quiet-loud motif has been lifted by everybody from Lou Barlow to Mogwai, the album's emotional gelidity has done more to move away from prog-rock mistakes than almost any of the band's subsequent disciples, and it's easy to hear how the term "Slint dynamics" has become an indie categorization of its own. Most interestingly, however, is how even a seething angularity to songs like "Nosferatu Man" (disquieting, vampirish stop-starts) or "Good Morning, Captain" (a murmuring nod to "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner") certainly signaled the beginning of the end for the band. Recording was intense, traumatic, and one more piece of evidence supporting the theory that band members had to be periodically institutionalized during the completion of the album. Spiderland remains, though, not quite the insurmountable masterpiece its reputation may suggest. Brian McMahan softly speaks/screams his way through the asphyxiated music and too often evokes strangled pity instead of outright empathy. Which probably speaks more about the potential dangers of pretentious post-rock than the frigid musical climate of the album itself. Surely, years later, Spiderland is still a strong, slightly overrated, compelling piece of investigational despair that is a worthy asset to most any experimentalist's record collection.
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JD

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1509 on: 19 Apr 2009, 09:48 »



Slint - Spiderland
[img]http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_RK7DkC3UcD8/SZ8YHjq746I/AAAAAAAAAHM/UQ8WKSkTfvU/s400/Slint%2B-%2BSpiderland.jpg[img]

quote]
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http://www.mediaf!re.com/?2ljwwuqmzwg

Thank you, I will be downloading this the second i get home.
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Ernest

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1510 on: 19 Apr 2009, 18:02 »

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s42

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1511 on: 19 Apr 2009, 18:14 »

Yo, new Allá and Say Hi (To Your Mom). I'm liking both so far, so I thought I'd share.

Digs - Allá

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http://www.mediaf!re.com/?mj5ijmydomyThe artwork is tiny here because all the rest is massive on the net.

Oohs & Aahs - Say Hi

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http://www.mediafire.com/?lzq1mmgjdzx
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JD

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1512 on: 19 Apr 2009, 19:01 »

Bulldawg, itunes tells me there are 7 songs in the album, you are missing the last one.

on the Say Hi album: You should get it, it has some music that is lighthearted and easy to listen to. Hallie and Henry is where I fell in love.
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michaelicious

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1513 on: 20 Apr 2009, 11:29 »

In honour of the new Rival Schools album that is probably coming out sometime later this year, here is their "Lost Album" that was never released from 2003. Maybe some of these songs will make it onto the new one. For those who aren't "in the know", Rival Schools is a New York post-hardcore band fronted by hardcore icon Walter Schreifels (of Gorilla Biscuits and motherfucking Quicksand). They released one album and split in 2003. Even though they are considered a post-hardcore band I think they are a bit too poppy sounding for that label to describe them accurately. Sure their songs have a bit of an abrasive edge, but they are also super catchy. I think this is another case of dudes in punk bands that wanna do something a little more melodic (see also: Sharks Keep Moving, even though SKM and Rival Schools sound nothing alike).


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http://www.mediafire.com/?2u2d5yduzji
These songs aren't quite as good as the ones from United By Fate but I think that is just because they are pretty rough mixes, since this album was never released. They are still really good, though!
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1514 on: 20 Apr 2009, 11:57 »

The Arteries - "Blood Sweat & Beers"  (2009)



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http://www.mediaf!re.com/?mqt3nzu0eae
Some quality UK punk rock, like a mix of No Trigger/old-Rise Against-esque melodic hardcore, Descendents style pop-punk, and a hint of Rocket from the Crypt influence.  This is quite seriously some of the best punk rock I've heard in a long time.  Just don't be put off by the album title - although it may sound like something a shitty skinhead oi band might name their album, it's actually a compilation of the songs from three 10" vinyls entitled "blood" "sweat" and "beers" respectively.
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sean

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1515 on: 20 Apr 2009, 14:15 »

(see also: Sharks Keep Moving, even though SKM and Rival Schools sound nothing alike).

this is actually convincing me not to download this album.

:/
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ALoveSupreme

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1516 on: 20 Apr 2009, 16:48 »

Rival Schools

Awesome band, awesome video game, too (that's where they got their name)!  Thanks for uploading this, I did not know this existed, I also did not know they were putting out a new album, crazy!
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Clintaga

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1517 on: 20 Apr 2009, 16:57 »

Bulldawg,
I am extremely excited to listen to Spiderland, but your link brings me to the dreaded doom banner of Invalid File. This error has been forwarded to MediaFire's development team. Can you please rehost?
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1518 on: 20 Apr 2009, 19:15 »

Never really kept up with Smog after his reinvention, but I do quite enjoy this one.
Bill Callahan - Sometimes I Wish We Were an Eagle

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http://www.mediafire.com/?jmhywm2dakg
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Quote from: AMG
When Bill Callahan left behind his long held Smog moniker, he gave longtime fans of his lo-fi, mopey, sometimes angry aesthetic some real cause for worry: there was not only the name change, but the reliance on more technology that began with the Diamond Dancer EP and the outright lush production (compared to his past work as well as other indie rockers) on Woke on a Whaleheart. Sometimes I Wish We Were an Eagle should give them some cause for relief, though the growth on the previous two offerings cannot be erased. There is no grand statement on Eagle; it's merely the record that comes after Woke on a Whaleheart, but it feels more like a Smog record than anything he's done recently, even if it doesn't necessarily sound like one. This is the darkest, moodiest set he's issued since Supper in 2003. We don't hear much more than Callahan's idiosyncratic misanthropy offering itself speaking and breathing room on most of these tunes (even if he aspires to more); his baritone is right up front and rarely gets stretched. His themes seem to center on flight and return, and are no better illustrated than on the opening cut, "Jim Cain," where, along a gently shuffling snare and kick drum, his nylon-string acoustic and electric guitars, and a cheap but effective keyboard his ruminations are guided. They caress that voice out of its hiding place: "...Well I used to be darker/Then I got lighter, then I got dark again/Somethin' to be seen, was passing over/And over me/Well it seemed like a routine case at first/With the death of the shadow, came the lightness of births/In the darkest of nights, the truth still dazzled/And I work myself, until I'm frazzled/I ended up in search of ordinary things..." And this isn't so much a metaphor as a cause célèbre for the album.

So much here is written, scored for, and sung from, the place Callahan knows all too well, that outsider's place that comes from the richest of interior lives: the one that knows all the shades of gray. His lyrics and easy, somewhat sparse mix of acoustic and electric instruments show that he doesn't think about much except what's right in front of him. Tracks like "My Friend" express, gently at first then more aggressively, sentiments that may be wholesome in their intent, but in their expression become more aggressive and even slightly sinister.

One thing that is a carryover from Woke on a Whaleheart is the relative sophistication of the arrangements and production. The songs are characteristically simple: they way they are recorded is relatively more complex. Things are not so shambolic as they are carefully measured, tempered, and sequenced. Songs such as "All Thoughts Are Prey to Some Beast," are based on two-chord vamps, and Callahan's voice does nothing to disguise itself as his lines are short, clipped, and shorn of unnecessary verbiage. But the sense of dynamic tension that gathers as violins, lithe, airy electric guitars playing a single string, syncopated tom-toms, and synth lines that mimic French horns, offer a dimension that is nearly cinematic. Ultimately, this sense of circular motion, whether it's flight and return, the human breath, or birth, death, rebirth, loss, and love is the elemental construction of everyday life, and hence a lyrical cornerstone on Sometimes I Wish We Were an Eagle. It is perhaps a seminal new chapter in Callahan's oeuvre of higher yet lo-fi outsider music.

With the rise of liquor and gun sales, worsening economy, and spread of class distrust... what better to celebrate than some country music?

John Doe & The Sadies - Country Club

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http://www.mediafire.com/?lhlqojylnhe
Quote from: AMG
Punk rock has produced few singers with the strength and chops of X's John Doe, and the force and presence of his vocals (and songwriting) on albums like Wild Gift and Under the Big Black Sun rank with the most satisfying rock & roll of the 1980s. But on Doe's recordings with X's acoustic incarnation, the Knitters, and on his debut solo album, Meet John Doe, he showed he was every bit as gifted with country-influenced material, and for years a handful of X fans has been patiently waiting and wishing for Doe to cut a straight-ahead country album. It took a while, but Doe has finally done it, and he's done it right; Country Club is a collaboration with the great Canadian roots rock combo the Sadies in which they interpret a handful of classic country sides in a style that fuses the moody late-night atmosphere of Nashville's countrypolitan era with the straightforward guitar-based sound of vintage Bakersfield acts like Buck Owens and Merle Haggard. As musicians, the Sadies are as tight and as capable as anyone walking into a recording studio these days, and their touch on these songs is all but flawless, fusing Prairie soul with a high lonesome sweetness and a subtle but expressive sense of aural adventure that turn their interpretations of "Night Life" and "Till I Get It Right" into something truly special. And Doe's vocals are a wonder; he never forces false melodrama or histrionics into these performances, but uses his rich, roomy voice to explore the spaces within these tunes with patience and a heart as big as all outdoors. Most country fans have heard "Help Me Make It Through the Night," "Detroit City," and "I Still Miss Someone" a few hundred times (at least) from dozens of artists, but Doe makes the heartache in their lyrics real and genuine, and few performers of the Nash Vegas era can match the innate understanding of classic country weepers that Doe reveals on this set. Doe and the Sadies contribute one new song each to these sessions (the band also tosses in two brief instrumentals), and "It Just Dawned on Me" and "Before I Wake" are good enough that you wouldn't guess they weren't copyrighted in the 1960s if you didn't read the credits. Plenty of rock singers have tried to honor the sound and traditions of period honky tonk music over the years, but you'd be hard-pressed to find one who sounds as ineffably right singing this stuff as John Doe, and Country Club is a casual, no-frills masterpiece.

Hopefully not too ubiquitous for this thread. If people enjoy this CD, I would not object to putting up more; this being an offer more than a "request".
Son Volt - Traces

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Quote from: AMG
Jay Farrar always provided the darkest, grittiest moments in Uncle Tupelo, so it comes as no surprise that Son Volt is a rawer record than A.M., the first album by Wilco, a band led by his former partner Jeff Tweedy. Throughout Son Volt's debut, Trace, the group reworks classic honky tonk and rock & roll, adding a desperate, determined edge to their performances. Even when they rock out, there is a palpable sense of melancholy to Farrar's voice, which lends a poignancy to the music. Trace isn't a great step forward from Tupelo's last album, the lovely Anodyne, but it is a fine continuation of the ideas Farrar has pursued over the course of his career.
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Avec

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1519 on: 20 Apr 2009, 19:25 »

You beat me to the punch in posting Bill Callahan.
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Avec

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1520 on: 20 Apr 2009, 19:40 »

Don't think I saw any of Pinback's stuff so I'll start off with their second LP, Blue Screen Life.



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Pinback perfects the essence of laid back home recording on Blue Screen Life, an album that sounds like a band set up in your living room, had some fun, and recorded a lo-fi indie-pop record for you. Now, that may sound like a diss, but it is not. This is a solid record. Faint and timid at times, picking up the pace during other times, Pinback, even when they really go at the rock, still retain the beauty of their lo-fi, home recorded style by playing slow, airy melodies with dreamy, sleepy rhythms laid over easy natured guitars. This is an honest, real record, floating with a slight pop touch, and as cozy as your warm bed.
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imapiratearg

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1521 on: 20 Apr 2009, 21:49 »

"Penelope" is up in my all-time favorite songs.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1522 on: 21 Apr 2009, 05:44 »

Thanks for the Pinback album. I haven't given them a listen in a few years.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1523 on: 21 Apr 2009, 13:38 »

Can we please stop worrying about if albums are "ubiquitous" or not. Just post good music that you think others would like. Full stop.
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Avec

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1524 on: 21 Apr 2009, 13:39 »

Just a sense of bringing something new to the party.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1525 on: 21 Apr 2009, 14:18 »

That's the general vibe I've gotten. Unless, of course, the old links are dead. Or the music is absofuckinglutely amazing.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1526 on: 21 Apr 2009, 19:45 »

Can we please stop worrying about if albums are "ubiquitous" or not. Just post good music that you think others would like. Full stop.

I don't want to start a new huge argument here, but I think it's fair game not wanting to upload stuff that's been uploaded before?

I think it's basically alright - it would be best if everyone just used the search option really quick before posting, but if a good album gets posted twice, it's not like a bad thing.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1527 on: 21 Apr 2009, 21:02 »

Well, I am sorry to have unintentionally detoured the thread to a degree. At any rate, here is some more folk/roots rock/americana/country stuff.

Grant Campbell - Expecting Great Things
Acoustic / Blues / Country
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http://www.mediafire.com/?njflmnnmiyohttp://www.myspace.com/grantcampbellmusic

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April 6th 2009 will see the release of ‘Expecting Great Things’, his third album and to date his most open and honest record.

The recording was partially inspired by the Bill Evans 1968 album ‘Alone’. A simple two mic set-up and recording one song after another, later adding touches of glockenspiel, mandolin & classical guitar. Letting each song take center stage and pushing his voice to the forefront.

The Glasgow born singer-songwriter released his debut album ‘Postcards from Nowhere’ (2005) on a small local independent label.

The album was recorded on a four track at home in Clydebank over several years prior to its release. It was all recorded, performed and mixed by Campbell. These thirteen tracks compiled together made up to a debut that even though it was a low-key release it gathered some impressive reviews including a Sunday Times ‘Album of the Week’ (see press section).

Between 2006 and 2007 Campbell recorded the follow-up album ‘Beyond Below’ (2007). This time the four-track was replaced with a sixteen track recorder which helped the record have a much wider sonic landscape. Again the album was recorded at home and mostly all of the performing duties were undertaken by Campbell himself.

Beyond Below was released in November 2007 on Campbell’s own label ‘Crooked Mouth Records’. The name comes from the Gaelic for Campbell which loosely translates as ‘crooked mouth’. It has so far picked up some great reviews and has been warmly received by the music press and critics alike.

As well as a string of live headline solo shows over the years Campbell has also supported some great artists, including; Odetta, John Hammond, Michael Hurley, Gary Louris (Jayhawks), Mary Gauthier, The Handsome Family, Howe Gelb (Giant Sand), Alison Moorer, James Blood Ulmer, Micah P Hinson, Califone, Mindy Smith, Alela Diane, Johnny Dowd & Diana Jones to name but a few.

In 2008 Grant began work on his third album as well as contributing a song to the Lionsgate produced film ‘The Burrowers’ which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival.

The Victor Mourning - Fire Fire Demos
Americana / Country / Acoustic
http://www.myspace.com/thevictormourning

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http://www.mediafire.com/?wygmlxyjknt
Quote
he Victor Mourning perform acoustic anachronisms from another century that are firmly rooted in this one; sometimes raucous, sometimes quiet, mostly dark, and very southern. The songs are about grief torn outcasts and albinos. And then there’s the one about the man who eats nothing but locusts and Campbell’s soup.
Spiritual Influences: Ancient American and British ballads, pre-WWII hillbilly music, abandoned shopping centers, vintage roadside hillbilly souvenirs, empty swimming pools, scythes, b&w films, snowglobes, flyover country, odd museums, the smell of old books, whiskey soap, gasoline & matchbooks, gutta percha, jewelry made of human hair, and the broken shores of Patagonia.

The Handsome Family - Through the Treets
Gothic / Country / Folk / Murder Ballads
http://www.myspace.com/thehandsomefamily

Code: [Select]
http://www.mediafire.com/?xyxhnm3mzyd
Quote from: allmusic
hrough the Trees was the Handsome Family's breakthrough album, garnering enough attention and sales that they were finally able to quit their day jobs and focus on music full-time. The group subsequently toured the U.S. and Europe, while critics on both sides of the Atlantic went nuts for the Sparks' clever, brooding songs. With Through the Trees, the transitional phase heard on Milk and Scissors was complete and the duo emerged with a more defined style, delivery, and songcraft which became their trademark sound. Brett sings with a deeper resonance and phrases Rennie's mini-stories more skillfully, while the occasional distorted guitar and harder-rocking tunes have been trimmed away, leaving a more consistent, stripped-down country feel. This album includes Rennie's vocal debut (albeit in a self-conscious, exaggerated nasal twang) on "Down in the Ground"; "Cathedrals," a song originally heard on their limited-edition vinyl EP Invisible Hands (Carrot Top, 1997); and enduring crowd favorites "The Woman Downstairs" and "Weightless Again." It also includes guest Jeff Tweedy of Wilco. While the albums that followed were excellent, Through the Trees remains the Handsome Family's definitive album, and is a wonderful encapsulation of the myths and heartbroken tales that populate the dark, romantic world of Brett and Rennie Sparks.

Now That's AmericanaOK
http://www.myspace.com/americanaok

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http://www.mediafire.com/?xiyihyoxjtz
http://www.mediafire.com/?ztdkdimwtzz
Quote from: MySpace
About AmericanaOK
Traditional, roots and folk music has always been the soundtrack to Tom Fahey’s life. It’s a passion that has been simmering since he was first exposed to jigs and reels, while growing up in Clare in Ireland. But since moving to Edinburgh, Tom has found the perfect medium for sharing his devotion – in the form of a weekly roots music radio show, AmericanaOK, syndicated to 12 international radio stations worldwide.
Tom works in Local Government. He spends much of his working day on recycling projects. Once a week, however, his voice reaches a potential audience of millions, in cities as far-flung as Nashville, Vancouver and Hobart, Australia.
When he first moved to Edinburgh, Tom spent a year learning the ropes with community radio stations Leith FM and Radio Free Porty. He soon realised he had grander ambitions.
“When I left Leith FM, I wanted to do my own thing,” he says. “I developed the concept for a show specifically based around independent American roots music. It’s kind of a niche market. Once I had interest from a couple of radio stations, the word just spread. And what started off as a cottage industry is now being broadcast around the world for 29 hours a week!”
BACK TO BASICS
Very much an enthusiast of digital technology, Tom puts his show together from the comfort of his own home.
“It’s all PC based,” he says. “I’ve got a home studio set up with USB microphones and my own little mixing desk. And, as well as the broadcast, the show is available as a podcast – it’s been downloaded over 150,000 to date.”
Although AmericanaOK is run on a voluntary basis, the show earned itself a strong reputation amongst both listeners and industry professionals. It’s not just about cueing up the CDs: Tom has recorded exclusive sessions with some of the rising stars of the independent scene. He also contributes to both the Euro Americana and Freeform American Roots charts.
CONVERTING THE SCEPTICS
Tom is the first to admit that Americana may not be to everyone’s taste, but stresses that it’s a genre that is too often misunderstood.
“I understand the prejudice,” he sighs. “People think it’s all about the country music cliche – line dancing and that, which is frankly embarrassing. It’s about real people and their real lives – and you can trace the history of the music right back to Scots and Irish traditional music. Sceptics should check out classic artists like Hank Williams, Gram Parsons, Steve Earle and Emmylou Harris – that’s the real deal.”
But it’s not just about established acts. Tom is also championing less-established musicians, so much so that he’s released a compilation CD, That’s AmericanaOK, with 15 tracks by new artists featured on the show.
The idea behind the CD is very much in keeping with the non-profit ethos of the show. “All of the artists donated a track for free,” says Tom. “Most of the artists I play are self-producing, making use of inexpensive equipment and selling their music over the Internet.”
“It’s all part of wider, independent grassroots movement,” he adds. “We’re not in this for the money – we’re doing it for the love.”.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1528 on: 21 Apr 2009, 22:40 »

LEAAAAAAAK

Jason Lytle - Yours Truly, The Commuter (2009)



For the uninitiated: Jason Lytle fronted Modesto, California based indie/electronic rock outfit Grandaddy, which split up in 2006. He was the sole songwriter in the band, and he sang and played most of the instruments on the albums. Live he handled vocals, guitars and keyboards and synths. This is his long-awaited solo album.

Code: [Select]
http://www.mediaf!re.com/?y2meh0jtjyh
It's rare that I have a "Holy Fuck" moment listening to music. But the opening track alone off this album did it for me. A must have.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1529 on: 22 Apr 2009, 12:45 »

A band from the town I live, Days Away is a progressive rock band mostly associated with a higher pitched vocals, lead singer and guitarist, Keith Goodwin. This is by no means a bad thing. His voice resembles that of Anthony Green (Circa Survive, Saosin, The Sounds Of Animals Fighting), ironically though, Goodwin and Green are good friends and have been ever since high school. I simply adore Days Away, I found them approximately three years ago purely by chance. All the fond memories of Mapping An Invisible World came from one of the first times I fell in love, that's long gone, but I'll never forget Days Away; they recently broke up to form a new band, but that's a different post.



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http://www.mediaf!re.com/download.php?nejjd50gzz3
Enjoy~
« Last Edit: 22 Apr 2009, 12:55 by Avec »
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lauraelise204

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1530 on: 22 Apr 2009, 14:08 »




It's rare that I have a "Holy Fuck" moment listening to music. But the opening track alone off this album did it for me. A must have.


SO right.  this album is truly great.  i don't know if the first song is my favourite, though.  i'm still not through listening to the album, but i really loved the second song and the third was another good one.  i definitely can't wait to listen to it manymanymany times.
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scarred

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1531 on: 22 Apr 2009, 18:13 »

I didn't mean to imply the first track is my favorite necessarily (although it's DAAAAMN good), just that it was one of those things where I threw the album up on iTunes, hit play, and within the opening of that song was hooked.

Looking at it now, Brand New Sun and It's the Weekend are current faves.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1532 on: 22 Apr 2009, 21:01 »

new.  Graham Coxon - The Spinning Top
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1533 on: 22 Apr 2009, 21:56 »

anyone remember hypnotoad? from futurama?


well, here's 42:53 of the noise he makes, if anyone wants to trigger a killing spree...

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http://www.mediaf!re.com/?1tmemmjyzuu
critique:

really, its that long... 49+ MB's
hate your neighbors? leave it on and go get a burger.
need to get info out of an informant? PLAY THIS.

what else can i say? besides...

I AM SO SORRY.

also, my record is 10:13 i was near ready to scream... you try!
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scarred

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1534 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:12 »

anyone remember hypnotoad? from futurama?

Good news everyone!

Watch this while listening to Hypnotoad: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1eApR0PFP50

My brain just exploded.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1535 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:21 »

GAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

i DID IT!

edit:

after about minute 5. i hear

DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,DIE PENIS,

backed up by ROOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOAR
« Last Edit: 22 Apr 2009, 22:23 by edwinalink »
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scarred

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1536 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:25 »

Yeah it was either "Die Penis" or "Guy Who Beat Us / Died Pissed."

It's all I hear anymore...

I kept going with the toad! 15 minutes in. I'm only bleeding a little.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1537 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:28 »

you beat my record!...

I feel making that monstrosity from a 17 second clip was a good use of my evening...

and now its out there, on the internet, forever! *rubs hands evily* :evil:
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scarred

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1538 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:31 »

Is it bad that I can still hear "Diabeetus" as I'm 20 minutes into Hypnotoad?

... I hurt.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1539 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:38 »

you broke your brain... you're gonna hear it forever now!
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1540 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:44 »

10 minutes left in Hypnotoad and I know I'm gonna have some fucked up nightmares tonight. But, I've made it this far...

Also, found this:

http://r33b.net/
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1541 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:49 »

yeah, I put that up on another site where i had the feeling people wouldnt be so aware of Hypnotoad, turns out that one of them has a video of it!

from the Benders Game DVD!!!

she says she will rip it for me, i hope she does!

YAY!

     i predict you will be repeatedly murdered by a penis in your dreams... :-o
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scarred

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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1542 on: 22 Apr 2009, 22:57 »

I just finished it. God, what a waste of tiALL GLORY TO THE HYPNOTOAD.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1543 on: 23 Apr 2009, 02:56 »

the only solace I can find is it only took me about 8 minutes to make, and that includes finding the original file!
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1544 on: 23 Apr 2009, 03:31 »

Okay now getting back on track kids, here's an Animal Collective bootleg from mid last year. Avey Tare, Panda Bear and Geologist play a loose and expansive - a high fidelity live recording perfect for chilling out in the warm after glow of a sunny day.

Live @ Lux in Lisbon, Portugal 28-05-08

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http://www.mediafire.com/file/hgetm2cj4zt/Live @ Lux in Lisbon, Portugal 28-05-08 1.rar
http://www.mediafire.com/file/nlzgtnmzamm/Live @ Lux in Lisbon, Portugal 28-05-08 2.rar
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1545 on: 23 Apr 2009, 11:54 »

As an apology for clogging this wondrous thread with talk of Hypnotoads, I offer you these gifts three:

Pavement - Live in Koln LP (Record Store Day Exclusive) (2500 Copies)



Though the cover art is the same, this is a completely different live LP than the one recently released for Pavement’s recent ‘Buy Early Get Now’ campaign.

For those unitiated to the wonders of Pavement, they're indie rock / stoner rock pioneers, fronted by Stephen Malkmus in the 90's. Anyone unfamiliar with them should go and pick up "Crooked Rain, Crooked Rain" immediately. (I know it's in this thread somewhere.)

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http://www.mediaf!re.com/?izjnmokqumz
Telekinesis! - Telekinesis!



Telekinesis! is based out of Seattle, WA, and is driven by a love for Brit-Pop, pistachio nuts, and Scandinavian cheese-cutters. They play infectiously simple and catchy indie rock/pop, and are an absolute joy on and offstage. Standout tracks for skeptics include "Coast of Carolina" and "All of a Sudden."

Code: [Select]
http://www.mediaf!re.com/?mi4dtwtz2wm
And finally, ANOTHER LEAAAAAAAK

Patrick Wolf - The Bachelor (Advance)



The much-anticipated follow-up to 2007's "The Magic Position."

According to Last.fm: Patrick Wolf is an English singer-songwriter from London.  Wolf mixes electronics and samples with a wide range of instruments including viola, keyboards, ukulele, and percussion, all of which he plays himself to form a fusion of jazz, folk and electronic music.

I've seen him live and it was fucking amazing. Though "The Magic Position" was iffy as an album, it had some insanely good songs mixed in with the disappointment. "The Bachelor" aims to fix all that.

Oh, and: spoken word segments by Tilda Swinton. Therefore, you must have it!

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http://www.mediaf!re.com/?1y2ydwzbmwz
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1546 on: 23 Apr 2009, 16:07 »

I recommend the Telekinesis thing.
I was a bit disappointed at first, but it's redeemed itself since.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1547 on: 23 Apr 2009, 16:11 »


Lead singer/guitarist Andy Falkous described the second album from his latest project Future Of The Left as “faster, bigger, grander, three per cent less nasty, 14 percent more energized, constructed from hard work and the happiest, most inspired band that I’ve ever had the pleasure of being a part of.”…..we can’t wait. (Source: www.recordstore.co.uk)

1. Arming Eritrea
2. Chin Music
3. The Hope That House Built
4. Throwing Bricks At Trains
5. I Am Civil Service
6. Land Of My Formers
7. You Need Satan More Than He Needs You
8. That Damned Fly
9. Stand By Your Manatee
10. Yin/Post Yin
11. Drink Nike
12. Lapsed Catholics

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RIYL: Mclusky
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1548 on: 23 Apr 2009, 16:42 »

Scarred, I seriously love your taste in music. Keep up the kick ass uploads.
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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening
« Reply #1549 on: 23 Apr 2009, 19:12 »

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