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The M/F Thread 2009: The Quickening

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Albatron:

--- Quote from: Harun on 20 Feb 2009, 11:32 ---Mastodon - Crack the Skye

In one word: Amazing. I think Blood Mountain caused a lot of love/hate opinions about the band. I was in the group that didn't really care for it. Crack the Skye has restored my faith in them. Not one bad song on the album. Guitars are ridiculously amazing. If you are a fan of guitar-based music that is not horrible, then listen to this now. About 97% of the vocals are clean singing, so those who are turned off by harsh vocals have no excuses to not listen to this. Read about/watch the inspiration for Crack the Skye, and the band's attempt to create a 'creepy classic rock sound'  here.

note on the actual files: the leak was missing the last track, and the quality is 128k. Not great quality, but still very listenable. After listening to this a couple times, it has compelled me to buy the album when it comes out.



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Wow, finally, a  good reason for me to like Mastodon. This is great.   

barista.babe:


--- Quote ---maybe this is just me being proud of my spanish heritage, or maybe this is me loving this song and wanting to share the new russian red single with you.
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and this is just too good to pass up...



--- Quote ---i started listening to this in the car this morning...for your enjoyment i present to you a leak of the yeah yeah yeah's new album "it's blitz."
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also...please don't post my links on sordo...or anywhere else. <3

Catacombs:
That Yeah Yeah Yeah's cover is pretty cool.  I don't like them, but that cover is still cool.

pulpfiction21:
September Malevolence - Tomorrow We'll Wonder Where This Generation Gets Its Priorities From (2005)
A lot of you might have heard this bands latest album "After the Darkness, There's A Next". It was a great album. If you like that album then this will make you happy as well. If you don't know the band, it's post-rock stuff.




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--- Quote ---They've been called the Swedish Explosions in the Sky, and you can only take such a comparison as flattery. September Malevolence leads a booming Swedish instrumental scene with moody, slightly off-beat post-rock that has a perfect insight into the quiet/loud approach that has dominated the genre over the past few years. Top-notch songwriting sets Tomorrow We'll Wonder... apart from the pack, and it's a skill like that which is an indicator that this band is not a flash in the pan.
Tomorrow We'll Wonder... gets darker than one would expect, but this is complemented well by a gloomy atmosphere that looms over the album. While the dark clouds are briefly cast away throughout the course of the album, it's ultimately a losing battle as the intent of the band becomes clear by the album's conclusion. And with that September Malevolence leaves us craving more.
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Squares On Both Sides - Dunaj (2005)
Read Review




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--- Quote ---The second album from Daniel Buerkner sees yet more solipsism from the 23 year old Berlin resident under his Squares On Both Sides guise. Sharing a love of hushed Americana with the likes of Vincent Gallo, Buerkner isn't afraid to pepper his musical and lyrical rectitude with a dose of angular verbosity when required. At times almost post-rock in its stravaig layers of meandering bass and rimy guitars, 'Dunaj' will appeal equally to fans of Mogwai as it does American Analogue Set and Elliot Smith. With the hissed piano and acoustic guitar of 'Lungs' resembling Papa M and the droll Malkmus-esque vocals of 'Ladder-Telescopes' perfectly complimenting the wheezing accordion, Buerkner has a keen understanding of what goes together; the result being both fragile and quite beautiful. Closing through the bruised instrumentation and synthetic bird-song of 'CSAD', Buerkner has made an album of shimmering delights that can be enjoyed up close or from afar. Recommended.
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Popup - A Time And A Place (2009)
For fans of Frightened Rabbit and Twilight Sad but with a little more pop. This is their debut album and they are giving it away for free download for the month of february.




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--- Quote ---“Three guys and one girl who specialize in jerky, kinetic acoustic pop, Popup are Scotland's biggest unsigned band, and if you only see one new Scottish act, make it them. Following on from a triumphant series of American dates sponsored by Radio 1, they seem poised to make it. Imagine Arab Strap on fluoxetine and you're getting close
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O! The Joy - Zen Mode (2008)
Just listen and love.




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--- Quote ---"If Built to Spill and The Mars Volta spawned a child, it might sound something along the lines of Sacramento's O! The Joy, but never long enough to get too caught up in the aforementioned names. Then again, there is ample evidence O! The Joy have explored the kosmische scene as well on their new record Zen Mob, here & there philosophically echoing Faust's manner of carrying rare tangents to fruition. Having said that, maybe I'm just high, but my favorite tune on the record, "Under The Radar," really reminds me of Joe Jackson, especially on the expansive slow punch of the chorus. Zen Mode shows a seamless weaving of genres, transferring from melodically intense passages to drugged out guitar mania splattering color."
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öde:

--- Quote from: TheFuriousWombat on 18 Feb 2009, 20:15 ---Bohren & Der Club of Gore - Gore Motel
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Yesss!

If anyone wants Sunset Mission and Black Earth, let me know.

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